400 Plus Air Service Agreements for Caribbean

The best all inclusive resorts in the Caribbean contribute to this annual aviation conclave. The agreements reached here can have a significant impact on vacation travel to Caribbean destinations.

The ninth International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) Air Services Negotiation Conference (ICAN2016) wound up successfully in Nassau, Bahamas, on last Friday, with 67 states/territories taking advantage of the event’s cost-effective multi-negotiation framework to expand air transport liberalization and market access through the signing of over 400 air services agreements and arrangements.

This year’s event also provided an opportunity for a special meeting of Caribbean states on NCLB, where they discussed the priorities and targets of the initiative for 2017.

Personally thanking the prime minister of The Bahamas, Perry Christie, whose government provided the facilities and hospitality for the ICAN2016 participants, ICAO council president Dr Olumuyiwa Benard Aliu underscored in his opening remarks: “… the importance ICAO attaches to the Caribbean region, and the critical role air transport plays in enhancing the tourism and overall prosperity of small island states more generally.”

Adding that continued liberalization of market access creates a better operating environment for the air transport industry, which generates $2.7 trillion for the global economy each year, and provides 63.5 million jobs globally, Aliu also updated the ICAN audience on a new partnership initiative ICAO has developed “to bring together aviation and development partners to identify synergies, challenges and opportunities in support of helping states leverage all available air transport benefits and to meet the objectives reflected in the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.”

In his keynote address, Christie highlighted the challenges being faced by small island developing states (SIDS) like The Bahamas, including the requirement to provide infrastructure facilities for every island to ensure air connectivity and essential services.

More than 366 negotiators took part in some 430 meetings during the five-day ICAN marathon in Nassau this year. Since the event’s inception in 2008, successive ICANs have been held in every world region and have made important contributions to the liberalization of international air transport and the enhancement of air connectivity for the benefit of states, the industry, and the travelling public.

ICAO ICAN events have also become an important platform for air transport regulatory reform, and a useful vehicle for promoting understanding and cooperation amongst government policy makers, regulators and industry players, as well as other aviation stakeholders.

The next ICAO Air Services Negotiation Conference (ICAN2017) will take place in Sri Lanka in December 2017.

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