BA and Japan Airlines agree revenue share
BRITISH Airways and Japan Airlines have agreed a revenue-sharing deal for flights between Europe and Japan, potentially giving their oneworld alliance more competitive muscle.
The joint venture would lead to more choice of flights and could lead to more routes, BA’s parent International Airlines Group (IAG) said yesterday.
“Despite the difficulties the Japanese aviation market has faced in recent years, we have great confidence in JAL’s business outlook and the overall market’s future prospects,” IAG chief executive Willie Walsh said.
Walsh has previously indicated that IAG, formed between BA and Spanish airline Iberia, was keen to pursue a joint venture with JAL, praising the carrier’s recovery from last year’s devastating earthquake and tsunami.
The Japanese airline, which forms part of the oneworld alliance with BA and American Airlines, emerged from bankruptcy last March and is planning to relist this year.
The group plans to raise more than ¥500bn (£4.1bn) ahead of re-listing its shares as early as September.
JAL has submitted an application to the Japanese government seeking antitrust immunity and IAG was in contact with the European Union, IAG said.