Sunday, July 20, 2025

U.S. MOVES AGAINST MEXICAN AIRLINES CLAIMING ANTI-COMPETITION


By Hanna Parry
Newsweek

The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) has announced a series of new regulatory measures restricting Mexican airlines in the United States.

The measures were announced Saturday in an effort to "to combat Mexico's blatant disregard of the 2015 U.S.-Mexico Air Transport Agreement and its ongoing anti-competitive behavior," according to a press release from the DOT.

Newsweek
has reached out to Mexico's Secretaría de Infraestructura, Comunicaciones y Transportes (Transport Department) for comment via email on Saturday afternoon.
Why It Matters

The 2015 agreement was designed to liberalize market access and promote fair competition between carriers from both countries. Mexico is accused of violating the agreement since 2022 when "it abruptly rescinded slots and then forced U.S. all-cargo carriers to relocate operations" from Benito Juárez International Airport in Mexico City. 

The U.S. government says this has disrupted trade flows, increased operational costs for U.S. businesses, and raised concerns about market competition.

Mexico is the top foreign destination for Americans with more than 40 million passengers flying there last year, the Associated Press reported.
What To Know

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said on Saturday that "[former President] Joe Biden and [former Transportation Secretary] Pete Buttigieg deliberately allowed Mexico to break our bilateral aviation agreement."

Duffy added: "That ends today. Let these actions serve as a warning to any country who thinks it can take advantage of the U.S., our carriers, and our market. America First means fighting for the fundamental principle of fairness."

The transportation secretary said his department was issuing the three following orders to stop Mexican airlines from "taking advantage" of the U.S. 

* Requires all Mexican airlines to file detailed schedules for their U.S. operations with the DOT.

*Mandates prior DOT approval before any large passenger or cargo aircraft charter flights by Mexican carriers can operate to or from the United States.

*Proposes withdrawing the antitrust immunity previously granted to the joint venture between Delta Air Lines and AeroMexico, citing concerns that Mexico's market interventions have created an unfair competitive environment

The DOT claims Mexico rescinded historic slots from three U.S. carriers: American, Delta, and United, as well as three Mexican airlines: AeroMexico, Viva Aerobus, and Volaris, at Benito Juárez International Airport in 2022 under "the pretense" of capacity constraints.

U.S. officials say they have tried repeatedly to confirm when the slots would be returned, or when major construction work at the Mexican airport would end but were not provided with information on either.

In February 2023, the Mexican government published a decree that forced all dedicated cargo operations to relocate from Mexico City International Airport to Felipe Ángeles International Airport, disrupting U.S. cargo routes and prompting industry and diplomatic pushback.
What People Are Saying

The Department of Transport said in a Saturday statement: "Mexico's actions harm airlines seeking to enter the market, existing competitor airlines, consumers of air travel and products relying on time-sensitive air cargo shipments traded between the two countries, and other stakeholders in the American economy."

It added: "The Department is committed to enforcing our agreements to ensure that aviation markets are fair and pro-competitive.
What Happens Next

If the withdrawal of antitrust immunity is finalized, the Delta-AeroMexico partnership would dissolve its ability to coordinate pricing and share revenue, although Delta could retain its equity stake in AeroMexico and continue independent operations between the two countries.

The situation remains dynamic, with ongoing diplomatic discussions and potential for further regulatory adjustments depending on Mexico's responses.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

It snows every day in the pilot's cockpit, that's why.

Anonymous said...

The USA should close all tortilla factories in the USA. Also no more Mexican snacks sold in America. (corn, chamoyadas, marranadas, snow cones). No more Mexican candy at the stores. Americans need to protect American businesses. No more Mexican cookies at the local stores. We all need to help Trump.

Anonymous said...

Cheaper prices better for us
They want to empower the white owners

Anonymous said...

Mexico City Benito Juarez airport, the busiest in Latin America, is located right in the middle of the largest population complex the Americas - small, overcrowded and surrounded by urbanization. It has had its share of crashes - much like the over-used high traffic Reagan National in Washington, D.C. with its recent mid-air collision. Felipe Angles, 30 miles nw of Distrito Federal was constructed to relieve the congestion - cargo traffic and new international flights. But the bloviating Orange Buffon blowhard knows better - more fear mongering posturing to arouse his xenophobic base. FWIW - in the the U.S - avoid the flying into the NE corridor - Washington, D.C. -Baltimore-Philidelphia-NY-Boston - overcrowded-overworked-DOGE downsized air control - disasters waiting to happen.

Anonymous said...

Sarcasm! I like that.

Anonymous said...

6:00 You want everyone to help Trump? He doesn't give a shit about you.
Where do we start? How about buying one of his Chinese-made bibles that he has never read? I could use gold sneakers or an overpriced watch. You need deep pockets to afford his meme coins. But you get personal access to the POTUS if you can tolerate his stench. Another reader mentioned cologne, that would help with his pungency. Sounds like Trump is decaying.
But you go on kissing his ass.

rita