CMA CGM, Air France-KLM to end cargo tie-up on US regulatory snag
SHIPPING giant CMA CGM and French-Dutch carrier Air France-KLM will end their air cargo alliance after a row over flight slots at Amsterdam airport cast doubt over regulatory approval in the massive US market.
The cargo partnership, struck in May 2022 in parallel to a deal that saw CMA CGM become a shareholder of Air France-KLM, was part of a push by Marseille-based CMA CGM to expand its reach in logistics, supported by huge shipping profits in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic.
“The tight regulatory environment in certain important markets has prevented the cooperation from working in an optimal way,” the companies said in a statement.
“As a consequence, Air France-KLM and CMA CGM today announce their decision to withdraw from their existing agreements from Mar 31, 2024.”
The regulatory aspect was related to the US, as prospects for antitrust clearance were complicated by tensions over Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport, two sources familiar with the matter said.
Plans announced last year by the Dutch government to cut the number of flights landing at Schiphol to reduce pollution angered operators, including US carrier JetBlue, which asked the US government to pursue countermeasures.
GET BT IN YOUR INBOX DAILY
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
The Dutch authorities later suspended the plan but the sources said the context remained unfavourable for CMA CGM and Air France KLM’s partnership to get clearance in the US.
Air France and CMA CGM are discussing terms for future cooperation in freight as independent operators, they said in the statement.
CMA CGM will remain a core shareholder of Air France-KLM but will leave its board on Mar 31, the companies said.
A share lock-up agreement will also be modified, with the lock-up now to expire completely on Feb 28, 2025.
Previously, the lock-up was to expire initially on Jun 15, 2025, followed by a subsequent lock-up period on 50 per cent of shares until Jun 15, 2028.
CMA CGM controls about 9 per cent of Air France-KLM’s capital.
Air France-KLM shares were down 3 per cent in mid-morning trading.
The two companies had struck the deal after banking on growing demand for flying goods around the world as supply chains remained snarled in the wake of the pandemic.
Deteriorated market conditions, reflecting economic and geopolitical pressures as well as increased capacity from other cargo operators, were also a factor in ending the alliance, one of the sources said. REUTERS
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Transport & Logistics
Vodafone gets green light for 5 billion euros sale of Spanish business
Stellantis takes on China budget EVs with Leapmotor sales in Europe
China’s Comac is designing a new widebody jet
Electric vehicle sales in UK on the rise, but still short of official targets
Capital A’s Teleport targets rapid growth after airline spinoff
SingPost, Lithuania’s biggest postal business tie up to explore new business