Air Transat Granted Temporary Codeshare Licences for India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Lebanon
The Canadian Transportation Agency (CTA) has granted Air Transat codeshare licences to operate services from Canada to Lebanon, India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. The approvals do not obligate the airline to proceed with the codeshare services and no such announcements have been made.
The CTA decisions, issued on 29 and 30OCT, authorize Air Transat to place its code on flights to those destinations should the airline decide to proceed with the arrangements.
While approvals for India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka fall under existing bilateral air service agreements, signed in 1982, 2013, and 2016 respectively, the CTA noted that the Lebanon approval is temporary and “extrabilateral.” The agency said the authorization was made despite the absence of a formal air service agreement between the two countries. The temporary licence will remain valid until 30JUN, 2027.
To maintain the approvals, Air Transat must continue to meet standard regulatory requirements, including holding a valid operating licence, maintaining an active Canadian aviation document, and carrying adequate liability insurance. The CTA said it already has these materials on file and is satisfied that Air Transat meets the conditions.
While codeshare permissions are a routine step in airline regulatory processes, they do not necessarily mean new routes will be launched. Instead, the approvals create a legal framework allowing Air Transat to activate the partnerships in the future. In many cases across the industry, approved codeshares are never implemented.
The Canadian Transportation Agency (CTA) has granted Air Transat codeshare licences to operate services from Canada to Lebanon, India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. The approvals do not obligate the airline to proceed with the codeshare services and no such announcements have been made.
The CTA decisions, issued on 29 and 30OCT, authorize Air Transat to place its code on flights to those destinations should the airline decide to proceed with the arrangements.
While approvals for India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka fall under existing bilateral air service agreements, signed in 1982, 2013, and 2016 respectively, the CTA noted that the Lebanon approval is temporary and “extrabilateral.” The agency said the authorization was made despite the absence of a formal air service agreement between the two countries. The temporary licence will remain valid until 30JUN, 2027.
To maintain the approvals, Air Transat must continue to meet standard regulatory requirements, including holding a valid operating licence, maintaining an active Canadian aviation document, and carrying adequate liability insurance. The CTA said it already has these materials on file and is satisfied that Air Transat meets the conditions.
While codeshare permissions are a routine step in airline regulatory processes, they do not necessarily mean new routes will be launched. Instead, the approvals create a legal framework allowing Air Transat to activate the partnerships in the future. In many cases across the industry, approved codeshares are never implemented.
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