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REGIONAL COOPERATION AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION

REGIONAL COOPERATION AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION

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PART IV:<br />

2012), and 9% lower in the year 2016. Air freight volumes are also expected to shrink in<br />

both 2008 and 2009. However, a more rapid recovery in line with world trade is anticipated<br />

with a return to 6%+ growth by 2010. (www.iata.org/economics).<br />

Financially, the world’s airlines saw a huge recession over 2008, based on substantial<br />

growth in fuel prices (+36%) which turned the net profit for the year 2007 (12.9 billion<br />

USD) in 8.5 billion USD of loss with real option to reach 16-17 billion USD for the year<br />

2008. (Pearce 2009: 2,4).<br />

In different scenarios for airline alliancing and mergers most likely scenario emphasizes<br />

elements of slowly lessening regulation, more joint venture and niche carriers, steady<br />

growth of demand, national identity guarded and gradually less government interference.<br />

(Kleymann, B. and Seristö, H. 2004:195). Consequently, it can be concluded that the<br />

Southeast European countries have real necessity and opportunity of positioning for<br />

the PSO implementation, although the strategy of expansion towards this region in air<br />

transportation is already evident in presence of solid air carriers of Central Europe, like<br />

Austria Airlines, Malev, CSA, AlItalia.<br />

5.<br />

PSO model in the region<br />

European Union Council of Ministers in 2004 authorized the European Commission to start<br />

negotiations with eight southeast European partners (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina,<br />

Bulgaria, Croatia, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Romania, Serbia and<br />

Montenegro and the U.N. Mission in Kosovo) on a European ECAA 2 agreement. The<br />

objective was to integrate the EU’s neighbors in the Southeast Europe into the EU’s internal<br />

aviation market, with open market access and full application of the EC 3 aviation law.<br />

The negotiations opened in March 2005 with a multilateral high-level meeting, at which<br />

all negotiating parties expressed support for reaching an ECAA agreement as quickly as<br />

possible. In order to give the ECAA partners time to prepare for the full application of EC<br />

aviation law, the EU developed a country-specific gradual approach: Once ECAA partners<br />

have fully implemented EC aviation law the ECAA airlines will have open access to the<br />

EU market. The transitional arrangements were negotiated in October and November 2005<br />

with each ECAA partner individually. After only nine months of negotiations, the text of<br />

the ECAA agreement was agreed upon by all parties in December 2005.<br />

The outcome of these negotiations constitutes significant and valuable progress. The level of<br />

regulatory convergence is unprecedented, as all partners have agreed to align their national<br />

aviation legislation to the complete aviation acquis of the community. Harmonized rules<br />

in Europe will create a common, free and safe air transport market, which can be a driving<br />

force for other sectors and contribute to the development of the whole region, benefiting<br />

consumers and industry alike. This is major step forward where air transport will play a key<br />

role in creating impetus for the political and economic integration of Europe.<br />

2 Common Aviation Area<br />

3 European Commission<br />

260

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