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		U.S. should deny market access to Norwegian budget airline - lawmaker
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		[March 25, 2021]  By 
		David Shepardson
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The chairman of the 
		U.S. House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee on Wednesday 
		urged the Biden administration to deny a permit for a new low-cost 
		Norwegian carrier to enter the domestic market.
 
 Representative Peter DeFazio, in a statement released ahead of a hearing 
		Thursday, urged Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg to deny Norse 
		Atlantic permission to enter the U.S. market.
 
 Last week, Reuters reported the budget airline planned to fly from U.S. 
		destinations such as New York, Los Angeles and Miami to European cities 
		including London, Paris and Oslo, with a goal of launching its first 
		flight in December this year.
 
 A spokeswoman for Buttigieg declined to comment ahead of the hearing.
 
 Norse, which is in the process of raising 1.28 billion Norwegian crowns 
		($149 million) from institutional investors ahead of an expected stock 
		market listing in Oslo next month, said it was confident of receiving 
		the required permits.
 
 "The operation will be in line with the agreements that regulate air 
		traffic between Europe and the U.S," Norse said in a statement.
 
 Bjoern Kjos, founder and former CEO of Norwegian Air, holds a 15% stake 
		in Norse Atlantic, which is majority owned by Bjoern Tore Larsen, a 
		co-founder of staffing company OSM Aviation, Norse Atlantic Airways said 
		in a statement announcing the new carrier last week.
 
 The airline will seek to fill a gap left by Norwegian, which offered 
		low-cost transatlantic flights until mounting debt and the collapse of 
		travel due to the COVID-19 pandemic forced it to exit its long-haul 
		business, leaving a slimmed-down airline focusing on Nordic and European 
		routes.
 
		
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			 Representative Peter 
			DeFazio (D-OR) speaks during a House Transportation and 
			Infrastructure Aviation Subcommittee hearing in Washington, D.C., 
			U.S., July 17, 2019. REUTERS/Erin Scott 
            
			 
DeFazio argued the Transportation Department in 2016 "imprudently issued" a 
foreign air carrier permit to Norwegian Air's long-haul business, which he said 
was incorporated in Ireland to avoid Norway's strong labour protections.
 "It is imperative that you correct the error of 2016 and deny this airline's 
application," he said of Norse Atlantic.
 
 The new carrier rejected the comparison with the now-defunct airline.
 
 "Norse Atlantic Airways is a Norwegian company," CEO Bjoern Tore Larsen told 
Reuters in an email.
 
 The 2016 decision followed a years-long battle between U.S. airlines and 
Norwegian, setting off an ever-escalating transatlantic fare war between U.S. 
carriers and foreign budget competitors.
 
 "We know that American consumers want an airline that can fly them safely and 
comfortably across the Atlantic at a low fare, and we at Norse Atlantic will 
deliver just that," Larsen said.
 
 "We will have permanent employees in the USA, in the air and on the ground. We 
will use Boeing Dreamliner planes and we of course respect the employees' right 
to unionize if they wish to do so," the CEO said.
 
 ($1 = 8.6110 Norwegian crowns)
 
 (Reporting by David Shepardson in Washington and Terje Solsvik in Oslo. Editing 
by Chris Reese, David Gregorio and Mark Potter)
 
				 
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