The Bundeskartellamt has cleared the wet-lease agreement on 38 passenger aircraft between Lufthansa and Air Berlin. The agreement was proactively notified by the parties according to German merger control rules. With the wet-lease agreement Air Berlin will lease 38 aircraft of the types Airbus A319 and A320, including cockpit and cabin crews, to Lufthansa and its subsidiaries Eurowings and Austrian Airlines. The aircraft are stationed at German and Austrian airports. The agreement has a term of six years; the term can be extended subject to certain conditions. As is common in wet-lease agreements, the responsibility for, inter alia, flight operation, crew planning and maintenance remains with the wet-lease provider, in this case Air Berlin.
Featured News
Democrats Question Big Tech Ballroom Donations Amid Antitrust Concerns
Dec 4, 2025 by
CPI
US Solicitor General Urges Supreme Court to Turn Away Duke Energy Antitrust Case
Dec 4, 2025 by
CPI
Russia Blocks Snapchat and FaceTime in Expanding Crackdown
Dec 4, 2025 by
CPI
Front Row Motorsports Owner Details Major Financial Losses in NASCAR Antitrust Trial
Dec 4, 2025 by
CPI
OpenAI Ordered to Turn Over Millions of ChatGPT Records in Ongoing Copyright Battle
Dec 4, 2025 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Intellectual Property
Nov 19, 2025 by
CPI
Dealing in Intellectual Property: IP Justifications and Defenses in Digital Markets Cases
Nov 19, 2025 by
Jennifer Dixton
The Evolving Role of Innovation Theories of Harm in the Antitrust Analysis of Life Science Mergers
Nov 19, 2025 by
Michelle Yost Hale, Matthew D. McDonald & Merrill Stovroff
Who Can Fix It? Antitrust, IP Rights, and the Right to Repair
Nov 19, 2025 by
Rosa M. Morales
Copyright, Antitrust, and the Politics of Generative AI
Nov 19, 2025 by
Daryl Lim