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David Carr Carr: The Multinational Airline Has to Start Somewhere

Should Gerry Swartz, Canada & Australia point the way?

Written by David Carr   
Several regulatory hurdles remain, but sometime next year Gerry Swartz’s Onex Corporation will have a 12.5% stake in Qantas Airways of Australia, one of the world’s finest airlines. Since his proposal to first buy and merge Air Canada and Canadian Airlines crashed and burned, Swartz has built up an impressive aviation portfolio including Spirit Aero Systems, formerly the fuselage business of Boeing, and more recently the business aviation division of Raytheon.

Onex is reported to be bidding for Air Canada Technical Services (ACTS), which controls approximately 43% of all heavy maintenance done in Canada. If successful, Swartz will be a player in both Australian and Canadian air transport and may want to consider a larger goal, setting the table for ‘Air Cqantas,’ a merger between Air Canada and Qantas. Indeed, the Texas Pacific Group, an Onex partner in Qantas showed an interest in Air Canada as early as 2003.

Airline alliances such as oneworld and Star are fine marketing and code-sharing vehicles, and little else. Talk of realizing new economies through bulk fleet buying and uniform cabins was just that; talk. The time for a multinational airline cemented by equity, global branding and a modernized regulatory environment is long overdue.

Air France took over KLM in 2003, and has analysts scratching their heads over renewed merger talks with debt-ridden Alitalia. But that is backyard stuff. A European Union airline can buy a rival. Even so, 51% of KLM voting shares remain firmly on the ground in the Netherlands.

Giovanni Bisignani, director general and chief executive officer of the International Air Transport Association (IATA), says the failure of governments to liberalize the airline sector is stalling the recovery. Talk about your paradigm shift. IATA was the poster boy for the protected flag carrier, fixing prices, discouraging competition and rewarding inefficiency.

Still, better late to the game than not show up at all. But where does the first domino fall? Perhaps somewhere between Canada and Australia. Swartz’s attempt to merge Air Canada and Canadian around a partnership with American Airlines may have led to Canada becoming the testing ground for the pan-global airline. We will never know. What we do know is Air Canada and Qantas are both niche carriers that could enter the field from a greater position of strength.

Both are former Crown corporations, similar in size and serving large countries with very small concentrated populations. Polar opposite seasons mean complementary peak periods and greater utilization of common ‘C’ and ‘VH’ registered aircraft. Air Canada has limited year-round flights to Australia versus Qantas’s seasonal service to Vancouver. That would change if Canada and Australia agree on an open-skies treaty allowing airlines to pick up and transport passengers onto a third country.

Onex is in tough for ACTS but even if successful, there is a sizeable gap between the maintenance floor of one airline and the executive offices of another. What are the obstacles?

Geography likely ensures that the challenge of immediate fleet integration would not be as great as was the case with Air Canada and Canadian. Ditto, flight crew seniority and other labour agreements – but don’t expect unions to stand idly by. One Australian union leader has already declared, “Qantas should be treated differently because it is an essential part of Australian society.”

Ballocks yes, but in building a multinational airline misguided flag waving is unavoidable, even between two like-minded economies that see neither as a threat. Australia allows for 49% of its airlines to be owned by non-Australians. This compares favourably against Canada, which clings to a 25% cap while other corporate icons such as The Bay, Inco, Dofasco and Fairmont Hotels slip through Canadian fingers.

A greater stumbling block will be bilateral agreements, although Canada’s recently announced “Blue Sky” policy and a global shift to open-skies should lessen the burden.

A multinational airline is not impossible, just impossibly difficult. But it is what the industry needs, what the founders of airline alliances envision, and what governments must soon embrace. Given this inevitability there is no reason why Air Canada and Qantas should not take the lead. Air Cqantas is an impractical name – but it has a nice ring to it.