Vistara, Singapore Airlines deepen ties; watchdog probes

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Vistara (UK, Delhi Int’l) and its 49% owner Singapore Airlines (SQ, Singapore Changi) have signed a Commercial Cooperation Framework Agreement that seeks – subject to regulatory approval in Singapore – to jointly operate 16 routes that the two carriers currently ply separately. The deal will strengthen an existing codeshare partnership in effect since 2017 by “harmonising efforts in capacity planning, sales, marketing, joint fare products, customer services, and operations,” the airlines outlined in a statement on December 7. India’s Tata Sons empire holds the other 51% in Vistara. Bolstering the partnership “will allow both airlines to achieve further synergies on services between Singapore and India as well as in the key regions of Southeast Asia, Australia, and New Zealand,” the statement summarised, adding that this would be important as the industry recovers from the coronavirus crisis as connectivity is “restored in a gradual and calibrated manner in tandem with demand.” The partners submitted their pact to the Competition and Consumer Commission of Singapore (CCCS), which has subsequently sought public feedback on whether it could adversely affect fares. Any concerns that fewer flights may affect ticket prices or seat capacity can be submitted to the body by December 21, it said. The watchdog outlined in a statement dated December 8 that it had received the application on November 30 and was now assessing whether the proposed cooperation would infringe section 34 of the city-state’s Competition Act. The deepening ties would cover 16 routes that the two airlines currently operate separately. Overlapping direct routes comprise Singapore Changi to Delhi Int’l and Singapore-Mumbai Int’l, while overlapping non-direct routes include routes between Singapore and Ahmedabad, Amritsar, Bhubaneswar, Bangalore Int’l, Chennai, Goa Dabolim, Guwahati, Hyderabad Int’l, Kochi Int’l, Kolkata Int’l, Lucknow, Port Blair, Thiruvananthapuram, and Varanasi. Vistara and Singapore Airlines initially forged their extended agreement in February, before the pandemic hit the industry. The proposed cooperation would include SIA subsidiaries SilkAir (MI, Singapore Changi), which is to be integrated into Singapore Airlines over the coming years, and potentially low-cost unit Scoot (TR, Singapore Changi), the CCCS said.

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