IATA has welcomed the decision by the United
States Department of Transportation (DOT) to grant final approval
to Resolution 787.
The resolution is the foundation document
for the New Distribution Capability (NDC), a travel
industry-supported program launched by IATA for the development
and market adoption of a new, XML-based data transmission
standard.
“This is a very exciting development for
air travelers, airlines, intermediaries, and for competition,”
said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO.
The final approval leaves unchanged DOT’s
tentative decision approving Resolution 787, which occurred on 21
May 2014. In the tentative decision DOT stated that, “Comparison
shopping under the current system is generally limited strictly to
comparing fares, and it is difficult to make price quality
comparisons of different carriers’ product offerings....The
modernized communication standards and protocols and the marketing
innovations that [Resolution 787] could facilitate would be procompetitive and in the public interest.”
As part of its
tentative and final approvals, DOT accepted the conditions
proposed by IATA and Open Allies for Airfare Transparency to
ensure that no traveler is required to supply personal information
to receive an airfare offer (“anonymous shopping”); that the
standard remains voluntary and that each airline is free to choose
its own data exchange methodologies.
“Since Resolution 787
was adopted by the Passenger Services Conference, IATA has
emphasized that NDC will be a voluntary standard and that no
passenger will be required to divulge personal information to
receive an offer. We are pleased to reaffirm those commitments,”
said Tyler .
According to DOT, Resolution 787 will
“create modern, industry-wide technical standards and protocols
for data transmission throughout the distribution chain, promoting
efficiency, cost savings, and innovation through a real-time
exchange of price and service information among carriers, travel
agents, customers, and other parties, such as web-based
aggregators”.
Furthermore, “the use of common technical standards
could facilitate the marketplace development of distribution
practices and channels that would make it easier for consumers to
compare competing carriers’ fares and ancillary products across
multiple distribution channels, make purchasing more convenient,
allow carriers to customize service and amenity offers, and
increase transparency, efficiency, and competition”.
“With
the path now clear to begin to implement NDC on a voluntary basis,
the next step is the release of the first comprehensive set of NDC
end-to-end schemas, so the travel industry can start defining how
to best take advantage of the new capability. We look forward to
working with all stakeholders to advance the standard for
transmission of airline product offers. This will enable travel
sellers and consumers to have access to all of an airline’s
products and offerings and to compare the full value of the product offer, not just the base fare,” said Tyler.
IATA,
Resolution,
787,
Airlines,
Aviation
|