Air NZ accuses regulator of grandstanding
Air NZ accuses regulator of grandstanding on cartel claims
By Paul McBeth
Dec. 15 - Air New Zealand said the Commerce Commission is “grandstanding’ by announcing it will start proceeding against 13 airlines, including the national carrier, for price fixing on air freight.
“We have repeatedly
asked the Commerce Commission to present us with any
evidence to indicate that Air New Zealand has breached any
laws,” said Air New Zealand general counsel John Blair.
“To date they have been either unwilling or unable to do
so.”
The Commission alleges the airlines, including
Air New Zealand, colluded to impose fuel surcharges for more
than nine years “under the auspices of the trade
organisation International Air Transport Association,” the
commission said in a statement today.
The air freight market to and from New Zealand is estimated to be worth more than NZ$400 million annually, and total revenue over the period of the agreement is believed to be almost NZ$3 billion, the regulator said. Any airlines convicted face whichever penalty is the highest of NZ$10 million, three times the commercial gain or 10% of the group’s annual turnover.
The airlines also conspired to fix prices by imposing a security surcharge immediately following the terror attacks of 2001, the regulator said.
Shares of Air New Zealand were unchanged at 84 cents today and have fallen 23% in the past three months.
Air New
Zealand’s Blair said the commission’s announcement “is
clearly an approach designed to justify their existence and
seems more about grandstanding than about getting to the
bottom of the allegations and facilitating a co-operative
approach from the airlines.”
The airline had
spent “several million dollars over the past three years,
analysing over a million documents and speaking to many
current and former employees” in response to ongoing
concerns from the commission. Blair said the commission’s
“disdain for engagement has made this exercise many times
more expensive than it needed to be.”
The investigation is part of a worldwide case that potentially involves 60 airlines, and the airlines are under similar scrutiny by other competition watchdogs including the U.S. Department of Justice, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission and the European Commission.
The 13 companies named are: Air NZ; British Airways Plc; Cargolux International Airlines S.A; Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd.; Emirates; PT Garuda Indonesia; Japan Airlines International Co.; Korean Airlines Co.; Malaysian Airline System Berhad Ltd.; Qantas Airways Ltd.; Singapore Airlines Cargo Pte and Singapore Airlines Ltd; Thai Airways International Public Co.; United Airlines Inc.
(Businesswire)
ENDS