An airline alliance is an agreement between two or more airlines to cooperate for the foreseeable future on a substantial level. The degree of cooperation differs between alliances. The three largest alliances are the Star Alliance, SkyTeam and Oneworld.
A more recent development is the formation of alliances between cargo airlines, such as that of WOW Alliance between Lufthansa Cargo, Singapore Airlines Cargo, SAS Cargo Group and Japan Airlines Cargo.
The abilities for airlines to form an alliance are often restricted by laws and regulations or subject to approval by authorities. Antitrust laws play a large role. Sometimes political quid pro quo between governments is at hand.
Also landing rights may not be owned by the airlines themselves but by the nation in which their head office resides. If an airline loses its national identity by merging to a large extent with a foreign company, existing agreements may be declared void by a country which objects to the merger.
The first large alliance which is still functioning started in 1989, when Northwest and KLM Royal Dutch Airlines agreed to code sharing on a large scale. A huge step was taken in 1992 when The Netherlands signed the first open skies agreement with the United States, in spite of objections uttered by the European Union authorities. This gave both countries unrestricted landing rights on each others' soil. Normally landing rights are granted for a fixed number of flights per week to a fixed destination. Each adjustment takes a lot of negotiating, often between governments rather than between the companies involved. The United States was so pleased with the independent position that the Dutch took versus the E.U. that it granted anti-trust immunity to the alliance between Northwest and KLM. Other alliances would struggle for years to overcome transnational barriers or still do so.
The three largest alliances are:
| Star Alliance | oneworld | Skyteam Alliance | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Passengers per year * | 425 million | 242.6 million | 372.9 million |
| Market share ** | 23.6% | 13.5% | 20.7% |
| Participants* | Adria Airways Air Canada Air New Zealand ANA Asiana Airlines Austrian Airlines Blue1 bmi Croatia Airlines LOT Polish Airlines Lufthansa SAS Singapore Airlines South African Airways Spanair Swiss International Air Lines TAP Air Portugal Thai Airways International United US Airways Varig | Aer Lingus American Airlines British Airways Cathay Pacific Finnair Iberia LAN Qantas | Aeroflot Aeroméxico Air France-KLM Alitalia Continental Czech Airlines Delta Korean Air Northwest |
| Network Strengths* | Global | US & Canada (AC, UA, US)US & Canada (AA) | Mexico & Central America (AA)US & Canada (DL, CO, NW) Mexico & Central America (AM, CO) Caribbean (DL, AM, CO) Western Europe (AF, KL, AZ, NW) Central & Eastern Europe (OK, SU) Middle East (OK, AZ) Asia (KE, NW) Pacific Islands (CO) |
| Network Weaknesses* | Central & Eastern Europe***(Malév) Middle East***(Royal Jordanian) Africa | South America Africa Australia & New Zealand | |
| External link | staralliance.com | oneworld.com | skyteam.com |
Network strengths are continents or regions where listed airlines have one or more hubs or a major presence in several destinations.
Network weaknesses are continents or regions with no hubs and few (if any) flights for any airline in the alliance.
As the table shows, the three alliances combined fly 58% of all passengers travelling each year.
Allianz (Luftfahrt) | Alliance de compagnies aériennes | 航空連合 | 항공동맹 | Perikatan penerbangan | Sojusze linii lotniczych | Aliança aérea | Flygbolagsallians
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"Airline alliance".
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