US cuts Mexico’s air safety rating, bars new routes
Published: 08:05 PM,May 26,2021 | EDITED : 07:05 PM,May 26,2021
NEW YORK: US regulators on Tuesday downgraded Mexico’s air safety rating, a move that bars Mexican carriers from offering new service or routes in the United States.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said the action also means US carriers cannot market and sell tickets with Mexican partner airlines, but it does not affect any existing service.
“The FAA will increase its scrutiny of Mexican airline flights to the United States’’, the agency said, adding that it found “several areas” where the country fell short of international air safety standards.
The US regulator lowered Mexico’s safety rating to “Category 2” from “Category 1.”
The downgrade means Mexico’s laws or regulations do not ensure “minimum national international safety standards’’, or the “civil aviation authority is lacking in one or more areas such as technical expertise, trained personnel, record keeping, inspection procedures or resolution of safety concerns’’,the FAA said.
Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador on Monday urged US regulators not to downgrade the air safety rating of his country, which is heavily reliant on tourism.
“We have been complying with all the requirements. We feel that this decision should not be carried out’’, he said when asked about reports that a downgrade was imminent.
Lopez Obrador said the move appeared to be aimed at helping US airlines win customers.
“They are the ones who benefit and the national airlines could be harmed’’, he told reporters, but added that since Mexican carriers were mainly focused on domestic flights the impact would be limited. — AFP
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said the action also means US carriers cannot market and sell tickets with Mexican partner airlines, but it does not affect any existing service.
“The FAA will increase its scrutiny of Mexican airline flights to the United States’’, the agency said, adding that it found “several areas” where the country fell short of international air safety standards.
The US regulator lowered Mexico’s safety rating to “Category 2” from “Category 1.”
The downgrade means Mexico’s laws or regulations do not ensure “minimum national international safety standards’’, or the “civil aviation authority is lacking in one or more areas such as technical expertise, trained personnel, record keeping, inspection procedures or resolution of safety concerns’’,the FAA said.
Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador on Monday urged US regulators not to downgrade the air safety rating of his country, which is heavily reliant on tourism.
“We have been complying with all the requirements. We feel that this decision should not be carried out’’, he said when asked about reports that a downgrade was imminent.
Lopez Obrador said the move appeared to be aimed at helping US airlines win customers.
“They are the ones who benefit and the national airlines could be harmed’’, he told reporters, but added that since Mexican carriers were mainly focused on domestic flights the impact would be limited. — AFP