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A Senate subcommittee on Tuesday slammed U.S. airlines large and small over fees to pick seats on flights. Between 2018 and 2023 American , Delta , United , Spirit and Frontier brought in $12.4 billion in seating fees, including for seats with extra legroom as well as those in "preferred" locations that are closer to the front of the plane, or window or aisle seats, said the report from the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. While most major U.S. airlines have gotten rid of ticket-change fees for standard economy tickets, they have added fees to select more popular or roomier seats on board. Carriers have also been racing to add more premium seats on board to increase revenue.
Organizations: Frontier, Investigations Locations: Delta, U.S
A tourist takes a photo as the Acropolis’ Propylaea are seen in the background, in Athens, Greece, on June 28, 2024. Flights between the U.S. and Europe have not been this cheap in three years, when many countries were just lifting Covid-19 era rules. According to flight-tracking company Hopper, "good deal" fares across the Atlantic to Europe are averaging $578 in November, down from $619 a year earlier. Many airlines from financially troubled Spirit Airlines to profitable Southwest Airlines have cut flights or trimmed growth plans into next year, which has helped keep U.S. fares firm. Aircraft scarcity is also limiting airlines from adding many flights.
Persons: Brett Snyder, Hopper Organizations: U.S, Airlines, Southwest Airlines, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, American Airlines Locations: Athens, Greece, Europe, Hopper .
Apple CEO Tim Cook inspects the new iPhone 16 during an Apple special event at Apple headquarters on September 09, 2024 in Cupertino, California. "That should be expected, as Apple Intelligence features (the only reason to upgrade)have yet to be rolled out in a significant way." U.S. carriers, including AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile, have also seemed unexcited about an Apple Intelligence upgrade cycle. But research firm Counterpoint Research told CNBC in October that iPhone sales, especially for the lower-priced devices, were strong in China. WATCH: Apple Intelligence rollout could be an inflection point, says Futurum Group CEO's Daniel Newman
Persons: Tim Cook, Apple doesn't, Morgan Stanley, Erik Woodring, Davidson, Gil Luria, We're, John Stankey, Malif Atik, Apple, Luca Maestri, Maestri, Kevan Parekh, CEO's Daniel Newman Organizations: Apple, Apple Intelligence, Verizon, Mobile, Huawei, Citi, Research, CNBC, Apple Watch, LSEG, Major League Soccer Locations: Cupertino , California, Spanish, U.S, China, Apple's
A report from travel news site Skift shows that seven major airlines have retreated from the country in the past four months. Longer flights require more fuel, which make flights more expensive. "Indeed U.S. carriers are making hard but very commercial decisions to drop Chinese services and redeploy the aircraft elsewhere," he said. China airlines' struggleLow demand has also plagued domestic airlines in China. Collectively, Chinese airlines have increased capacity to Europe, compared to pre-pandemic, even though the market and trade flows were much stronger then, said Grant.
Persons: Nicola Economou, John Grant, Grant, It's, Finnair, bauer, haven't Organizations: FIA, FI, British Airlines, Qantas, Nurphoto, Getty, Virgin Atlantic, Scandinavian Airlines, Boeing, OAG, EU, Aaronp, Cape Town, U.S, CNBC, Air China Locations: China, Asia, Hong Kong, Ukraine, United Kingdom, Russia, — Tokyo, Shanghai, Seoul, Bangkok, Delhi, Singapore, Thailand, Beijing, Cape, Sydney, Australia's, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Hong Kong . U.S, Russian, U.S, Europe, Frankfurt
However, weather-related events like Hurricane Helene are generally considered to be outside an airline’s control, meaning passengers have relatively few rights to compensation, experts said. Airlines make concessions in some casesSome airlines are making concessions tied to Hurricane Helene, though they vary by carrier and geography. For example, American Airlines, Delta Airlines and United Airlines have alerts about flooding in the Southeast. American Airlines is also giving leeway to passengers scheduled to travel through Augusta, Georgia, between Sept. 29 and Oct. 4. Plus, policies bought after Helene became a named storm generally won’t cover claims related to it.
Persons: Eric Napoli, Helene, Napoli, , Hurricane Helene, , Sally French, ” Napoli Organizations: North Carolina Department of Transportation, U.S . Department of Transportation, Hurricane, American Airlines, Delta Airlines, United Airlines, Valdosta ., Delta, Consumers Locations: Southeast U.S, U.S, Florida, Florida , Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Asheville , North Carolina, Georgia, Valdosta, Valdosta . United, Augusta , Georgia, Asheville
Men inspect the damage from flooding in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene on Sept. 28, 2024 in Asheville, North Carolina. Hurricane Helene made landfall Thursday in Florida as a Category 4 storm, leaving a swath of wind- and flood-related damage across Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and Tennessee. Airlines make concessions in some casesDamage to a store in Valdosta, Georgia, from Hurricane Helene. Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images News | Getty ImagesSome airlines are making concessions tied to Hurricane Helene, though they vary by carrier and geography. For example, American Airlines, Delta Airlines and United Airlines have alerts about flooding in the Southeast.
Persons: Hurricane Helene, Sean Rayford, Eric Napoli, Helene, Taylor, Napoli, Michael M, Sally French Organizations: Getty, North Carolina Department of Transportation, U.S . Department of Transportation, Finance, Santiago, Hurricane, American Airlines, Delta Airlines, United Airlines, Valdosta ., Delta Locations: Hurricane, Asheville , North Carolina, Southeast U.S, U.S, Florida, Florida , Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Valdosta , Georgia, Georgia, Valdosta, Valdosta . United, Augusta , Georgia, Asheville
An American Airlines' Embraer E175LR (front), an American Airlines' Boeing 737 (C) and an American Airlines' Boeing 737 are seen parked at LaGuardia Airport in Queens, New York on May 24, 2024. American Airlines is in talks to make Citigroup its exclusive credit card partner, dropping rival issuer Barclays from a partnership that dates back to the airline's 2013 takeover of US Airways, said people with knowledge of the negotiations. Banks' co-brand deals with airlines, retailers and hotel chains are some of the most hotly contested negotiations in the industry. Carriers have said growth in card spending has far exceeded that of passenger revenue in recent years. While it says it has the largest loyalty program, American was out-earned by Delta there, which made nearly $7 billion in payments from its American Express card partnership last year, compared to $5.2 billion for American.
Persons: Banks Organizations: American Airlines, Embraer, Boeing, LaGuardia Airport, Citigroup, Barclays, US Airways, Consumer Financial Protection, Delta, American Express Locations: Queens , New York
The leader of one of the largest U.S. carriers said there have been more iPhone 16 sales in the first week of preordering compared to the same period last year for the iPhone 15. The iPhone 16 was announced on Sept. 9 , when the company held this year's fall new product event. So, they're buying up the food chain, and they're buying at a greater rate," Sievert said, dismissing any softer iPhone 16 sales data as "nonsense." This is important because mobile carriers — including Verizon and AT & T — are the single-largest iPhone sales channel for Apple. Apple CEO Tim Cook inspects the new iPhone 16 during an Apple special event at Apple headquarters on September 09, 2024 in Cupertino, California.
Persons: Jim Cramer, Mike Sievert, Sievert, Morgan Stanley, That's, Jim, Sievert —, Wednesday's, — Morgan Stanley, Chi Kuo, Kuo, Jim Cramer's, Tim Cook, Justin Sullivan Organizations: Apple, Wall Street, Mobile, U.S, Verizon, AT, JPMorgan, Barclays, Bank of America, TF Securities, Apple Intelligence, CNBC Locations: U.S, Cupertino , California
An Air Canada Boeing 777-333(ER) is preparing to take off on the runway at Barcelona-El Prat Airport in Barcelona, Spain, on May 1, 2024. Air Canada said early on Sunday it had reached a tentative agreement with its pilots union over a new four-year collective agreement, in a last-minute deal that will avert a near-term strike or lockout. Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge, which operate nearly 670 flights per day carrying about 110,000 passengers as well as freight, will now continue flying as normal, the airline said. Air Canada said in a statement the terms of its new agreement with the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) representing more than 5,200 pilots will remain confidential, pending a ratification vote by its members expected to be completed over the next month. The ALPA said in a separate statement that its leaders had approved the tentative agreement with Air Canada for member ratification.
Persons: ALPA, Steve MacKinnon Organizations: Air Canada Boeing, El, Air Canada, Air Canada Rouge, Air Line Pilots Association, United Airlines, Labour Locations: Barcelona, Spain, Canada's, U.S, United
CNN —Air Canada said early on Sunday it had reached a tentative agreement with its pilots union over a new four-year collective agreement, in a last-minute deal that will avert a near-term strike or lockout. Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge, which operate nearly 670 flights per day carrying about 110,000 daily passengers as well as freight, will now continue flying as normal, the airline said. Air Canada said in a statement the terms of its new agreement with the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) representing more than 5,200 pilots will remain confidential, pending a ratification vote by its members expected to be completed over the next month. “After several consecutive weeks of intense round-the-clock negotiations, progress was made on several key issues including compensation, retirement, and work rules,” said First Officer Charlene Hudy, chair of the Air Canada ALPA master executive council. As a result, some United pilots now earn 92% more than their counterparts at Air Canada, the pilots’ association’s data shows.
Persons: ALPA, , Charlene Hudy, Steve MacKinnon, Justin Trudeau Organizations: CNN — Air, Air Canada, Air Canada Rouge, Air Line Pilots Association, , United Airlines, Labour, Canadian, Canadian Pacific Kansas City, Canadian National Railway Air Canada, Pilots, U.S, United Locations: CNN — Air Canada, Canada’s, U.S, United, Canadian Pacific
Here's what the Boeing strike might mean for flyers
  + stars: | 2024-09-13 | by ( Rob Wile | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +3 min
Boeing workers went on strike Friday, the latest disturbance in what has proven a devastating year for the American aircraft manufacturer. Southwest had sharply brought down its delivery target for Boeing aircraft earlier this year. A United spokesperson said the carrier was working with Boeing to understand what the impact to the airline's delivery schedule might be. "There will probably be very little direct impact on consumers as a result of the Boeing strike," Harteveldt told NBC News. The previous Boeing machinists strike, in 2008, lasted nearly two months; however, in a note to clients, Bank of America analyst Ronald Epstein said the latest one could prove as short as a week.
Persons: Jon Holden, Henry Harteveldt, Harteveldt, Ronald Epstein, Boeing's Organizations: Aerospace Machinists, Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Southwest Airlines, International Association of Machinists, Aerospace Workers, Southwest, United, Atmosphere Research, NBC, Bank of America, FAA, Dow Locations: Seattle , Washington, U.S, Southwest, United, Renton , Washington
U.S. passenger airlines have added nearly 194,000 jobs since 2021 as companies went on a hiring spree after spending months in a pandemic slump, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation. It’s a departure from the previous years when airlines couldn’t hire employees fast enough. U.S. airlines are usually adding pilots constantly since they are required to retire at age 65 by federal law. Then, travel demand snapped back faster than expected, climbing in earnest in 2022 and leaving airlines without experienced employees like customer service agents. “We will be hiring for the foreseeable future at levels like that,” he said at the time.
Persons: Kit Darby, they’ll, Raymond James, Savanthi, Tammy Romo, Robert Isom, , , Ken Byrnes Organizations: U.S . Department of Transportation, Airlines, Boeing, Airbus, U.S, American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines, JetBlue Airways, Spirit Airlines, Pratt & Whitney, Frontier Airlines, Dallas, , ” United Airlines, , FedEx, UPS, American, Embry, Riddle Aeronautical University Locations: U.S, ” United
Airports and airlines say they can handle both. U.S. airlines expect to transport 271 million passengers worldwide this summer, up 6.3% from last season, the Airlines for America trade group has projected. Peter Steffen / picture alliance via Getty ImageThe U.S. Department of Transportation tracks “extreme weather” delays caused by conditions like tornadoes, blizzards or hurricanes but not those due to heat. During extreme heat, the airport urges employees to stay hydrated, take frequent breaks and, if they’re working outdoors, to cool off inside every hour. “Passengers are also encouraged to use the airport’s water stations to stay hydrated in the Arizona heat,” he added.
Persons: It’s, Kevin Burke, Peter Steffen, Harry Reid, , Patrick Smith, Amanda Mazzagatti, Robert Thomas, Smith, they’re, John Trierweiler, PHX Organizations: Airlines, America, Airports, Getty, U.S . Department of Transportation, London’s, Airport, Alaska Airlines, Harry, Harry Reid International, , Embry, Riddle Aeronautical University, Sky Harbor International, Aviation Locations: U.S, America, Hanover, Germany, Europe, Seattle, Portland, California , Texas, Arizona, Louisiana, Las Vegas, Vegas, Daytona Beach , Florida, Phoenix
Marriott Bonvoy Bold Review
  + stars: | 2024-07-23 | by ( Jasmin Baron | Angela Fung | Sarah Silbert | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +21 min
The information for the following product(s) has been collected independently by Business Insider: Marriott Bonvoy Bold® Credit Card, Marriott Bonvoy Boundless® Credit Card. Only offers strong rewards for Marriott purchases Insider’s Take The Marriott Bonvoy Bold® Credit Card comes with an increased limited-time welcome bonus and good perks for a no-annual-fee card, but unless paying an annual fee is a dealbreaker for you, other Marriott cards — like the Marriott Bonvoy Boundless® Credit Card , Marriott Bonvoy Brilliant® American Express® Card, or Marriott Bonvoy Business® American Express® Card — are a better deal. Marriott Bonvoy Bold® Credit Card OverviewThe Marriott Bonvoy Bold® Credit Card offers surprisingly good benefits for a no-annual-fee credit card, particularly if you stay at Marriott hotels even once a year. Marriott Bonvoy Bold® Credit Card FeesAnnual FeeThe Marriott Bonvoy Bold® Credit Card doesn't charge an annual fee, so it's free to keep every year — and keeping a credit card open for the long term can actually improve your credit score. Marriott Bonvoy Bold Credit Card Frequently Asked QuestionsIs the Marriott Bonvoy Bold card worth it?
Persons: Cardholders, cardholders, you'll, Marriott, Regis, Chase, you've, It's, Hilton Organizations: Business, Marriott, Card, Residence, JW Marriott, Ritz, Carlton, Airline Partners, Cross, Unicef Marriott, Gold, Chase, Chase Marriott, Marriott Bonvoy, Starwood, American Express, American, Mastercard, Chevron Locations: Marriott, Marriott Bonvoy, SpringHill, U.S, St, IHG
Delta SkyMiles® Platinum Business American Express Card Annual Fee and Other CostsThe Delta SkyMiles® Platinum Business American Express Card comes with a $350 annual fee. Delta SkyMiles® Reserve Business American Express Card vs. Delta SkyMiles® Platinum Business American Express CardThe Delta SkyMiles® Reserve Business American Express Card is Delta's top-tier business credit card, and offers airport lounge access to both Delta Sky Club lounges as well as the American Express Centurion Lounge network on qualifying flights. Delta SkyMiles® Gold Business American Express Card vs. Delta SkyMiles® Platinum Business American Express CardThe Delta SkyMiles® Gold Business American Express Card is a great business credit card for Delta-flying business owners who are willing to pay a moderate annual fee for Delta travel benefits. Delta SkyMiles® Platinum Business American Express Card Frequently Asked QuestionsHow much is the Delta Platinum Business fee? The Delta SkyMiles® Platinum Business American Express Card is a mid-tier business credit card that earns Delta SkyMiles.
Persons: Doesn't, MQD Headstart, stow, You'll, you've, Miles, Cardholders, they'll, you'll Organizations: Delta, American, TSA PreCheck, American Express, Delta loyalists, Delta SkyMiles, Card, American Express Card, Business, Air France KLM Virgin Atlantic, Delta Sky Club, Delta Connection, Delta Shuttle, TSA, Global, Trip, Amex, SkyMiles, Express, Delta Sky, Express Card, Delta Reserve, Delta Gold, Delta Platinum Business Locations: Delta, U.S, delta.com, Chase, Caribbean, Central America, It's, There's
How to gain access to Delta Sky ClubsDelta Sky Club access is normally restricted to passengers traveling in business- or first-class seats on Delta and SkyTeam partners; certain travelers on qualifying flights who hold Delta elite status; or travelers who have purchased a Sky Club membership. Sky Club membership optionsThere's quantifiable monetary value to Delta Sky Club access — Sky Club memberships begin at $695 per year, but can be worth significantly more for frequent Delta travelers. Credit cards with Sky Club accessWith the right credit card, you can access Delta Sky Clubs for free on many flights. If you have the Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card or Delta SkyMiles® Reserve Business American Express Card, you can access Delta Sky Clubs if you're traveling on a Delta flight that same day. Conclusion: Enhancing your travel with Sky Club accessDelta Sky Club airport lounges can make your travels more comfortable and save you money on expensive airport food and drinks.
Persons: cardholders, we'll, MQD Headstart, stow, You'll, Uber, Wiley, Julie Mehretu, Peacock, Uber Cash, , you've, Business Insider's Organizations: Delta Sky Club, Sky Club, Air Lines, American Airlines and United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Sky, Delta Sky Clubs, Delta Sky Clubs Delta Sky, Delta, Delta Sky, Delta SkyMiles ®, American Express, SkyMiles, Express, Lufthansa, Austrian Airlines, American, ®, SkyMiles ®, U.S, Delta SkyMiles, Card, Express Card, Delta Reserve, American Express Card, Hilton, Marriott, Saks, Entertainment, Disney, ESPN, The New York Times, Street, Walmart, TSA, Global, Saks Fifth, Fine Hotels, Resorts, Hulu, Amex, Dell, Adobe, Adobe Creative, Club, Sky Clubs, American Express Delta Sky Club, Business Locations: U.S, Delta, Caribbean, American, delta.com, Hulu, AmexTravel.com, The, Sky
Delta Air Lines on Thursday forecast record revenue for the third quarter thanks to booming summer travel demand, but its forecast fell short of analysts' estimates as carriers discounted fares after expanding flights. Adjusting for one-time items, Delta reported earnings of $1.53 billion, or $2.36 a share, in line with analysts' estimates. Delta said corporate travel continues to increase and that most customers expect to maintain or grow their corporate travel spending this quarter and after. Revenue from international travel has been strong since the pandemic waned, though airlines have expanded schedules, meaning more competition for customers. In the current quarter, Delta expects to break more revenue records.
Persons: Delta, Ed Bastian, Bastian, LSEG Organizations: Delta Air Lines, Delta, U.S, LSEG, Revenue, CNBC, Air France, Rival United Airlines, American Express Locations: Atlanta, U.S, Paris, Delta
Scott Olson | Getty ImagesRecord summer air travel demand isn't translating to record U.S. airline profits. Some airlines have forecast record demand, and in some cases, revenue. American Airlines on May 28 cut its second-quarter revenue and profit forecasts and announced its chief commercial officer was leaving after a sales strategy backfired. "The domestic supply and demand imbalance has led to a weaker domestic pricing environment than we had forecast," American Airlines CEO Robert Isom said at a Bernstein industry conference the next day. Travelers at New York's LaGuardia Airport Leslie Josephs/CNBCSouthwest Airlines cut its second-quarter forecast in late June, citing shifting demand patterns.
Persons: Scott Olson, sprees, Raymond James, Savanthi Syth, Scott Group, Hopper, Airfare, Robert Isom, Leslie Josephs, Bob Jordan, Pratt, Ted Christie Organizations: O'Hare, Getty, Airbus, Boeing, Pratt & Whitney, NYSE Arca, Paris, Investors, Delta Air Lines, Analysts, Delta, American Express, United Airlines, Alaska Airlines, Wolfe Research, Scott, theTransportation Security Administration, Airlines, Airline, Aircraft, U.S, American Airlines, CNBC Southwest Airlines, Elliott Investment Management, Politico, JetBlue Airways, Frontier Airlines, JetBlue, Spirit Airlines Locations: Chicago, Delta, Alaska, U.S, Europe, New, Dallas
Rival United Airlines — second to Delta in net profit margins — is circling. Delta plans to open Delta One lounges in Boston and Los Angeles later this year, and is studying airports where it could open others. Like other airlines, Delta accepted billions in federal aid to weather the pandemic. Luxury air travel and the United States didn't go together for many years — and might not still, if you ask well-heeled globetrotters. And at Delta and other airlines, many of the perks for luxury flyers come through lounges.
Persons: Benoit Tessier, Ed Bastian's, Bastian, Ed Bastian, John F, Raymond James, Savanthi Syth, Andrew Nocella, Patrick Quayle, Quayle, Richard Anderson, Anderson, Delta, Barack Obama's, They're, Shai Weiss, Claude Roussel, Joe Biden, United States didn't, Henry Harteveldt, Scott Kirby Organizations: Airbus, Delta Air Lines, Reuters Delta Air Lines, Transportation Department, Rival United Airlines —, CNBC, Delta Air Lines Inc, Bloomberg, Getty, American Express, Kennedy International Airport, United, Boeing, U.S, Labor, Southwest Airlines, U.S ., JetBlue Airways, Delta, Corporate, Northwest Airlines, Endeavor, Virgin, American, Sky Club, New, LaGuardia, Etihad Airways, Singapore Airlines, Atmosphere Research, Airlines, Sky Clubs, Los Angeles International Airport, JFK, American Airlines, JPMorgan, Consumer Electronics, Starbucks Locations: punctuality, New York, Delta, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, Dubrovnik, Croatia, Amman, Jordan, Cape Town , South Africa, Atlanta, U.S, Queens, N.Y, United, Tokyo, York, United States, Las Vegas
New York CNN —If you took an American Airlines flight in the 1960s, you’d be wined and dined from the Coach-class “Royal Coachman” menu. “Meal service was once a point of pride,” said Henry Harteveldt, who covers the travel industry for Atmosphere Research Group. Meal service was a big focus of [competition] because entertainment options were more limited,” Harteveldt said. The September 11 attacks accelerated the decline of free airline meals. Airline meals had been the brunt of jokes and criticism for decades, but now people miss them.
Persons: you’d, , Henry Harteveldt, Peter Stackpole, Robert Crandall, Blaise Waguespack, It’s, Beef, ” Harteveldt, Rob Welham, Molly Brandt Organizations: New, New York CNN, American Airlines, Atmosphere Research, Pan American Airline, Shutterstock Airlines, Carriers, Singapore Airlines, Michelin, Embry, Riddle Aeronautical University, , Smithsonian, ” Airlines, “ Airlines, British Airways, Camera, Airlines, Continental Airlines, North America, mojo Locations: New York, Daytona Beach , Florida, Delta, North
An Alaska airlines Boeing 737 is taking off from Los Angeles International AirPort (LAX) in Los Angeles, California, on March 6, 2024. The Justice Department has started a criminal investigation into the Alaska Airlines incident where a door panel blew out mid-air two months ago, The Wall Street Journal reported Saturday. "In an event like this, it's normal for the DOJ to be conducting an investigation," an Alaska Airlines spokesperson said. Three passengers are suing Boeing and Alaska Airlines for $1 billion in damages, accusing Boeing and Alaska Airlines of negligence for allegedly having ignored warning signs. Alaska Airlines earlier estimated that the weekslong grounding of the Boeing 737 Max 9 will cost the carrier $150 million.
Persons: Max, DOJ didn't, , — CNBC's Rebecca Picciotto Organizations: Boeing, Los Angeles International AirPort, The, Department, Alaska Airlines, Street, DOJ, CNBC, Max, United Airlines Locations: Alaska, Los Angeles , California, Ontario , California, Portland , Oregon, United, U.S
And yet bosses of major carriers are already talking about building something called "5.5G," or "5G Advanced." Carriers in China, South Korea, the United States, and Europe, properly got underway with launches of 5G networks in 2019. 5G Advanced, or the name for the next stage of 5G, is the next evolution of mobile networks. 5G advanced — 5G standalone, that's absolutely fine. Telcos haven't yet revealed how much more a 5G Advanced data plan will cost compared with 5G.
Persons: Angel Garcia, it's, GSMAi, Milind Kulkarni, Howard Watson, 5.5G, Watson, execs, Mats Granryd, Granryd, Karen Tso, Telcos, Philip Song Organizations: Bloomberg, Getty, Spain — Telecom, Mobile, Congress, MWC, Deutsche Telekom, Telefonica, BT, Vodafone, Facebook, YouTube, Netflix, Apple, Apple Vision, Meta Quest, Telecommunications, 3GPP, CNBC, telco, Huawei, 5G, 5.5G Locations: BARCELONA, Spain, Barcelona, Orange, China, South Korea, United States, Europe, East, Asia Pacific, America
The U.S. Commerce Department probe is because Chinese assembled smart vehicles could collect sensitive data about U.S. citizens and infrastructure and send the data to China, the White House said. "China's policies could flood our market with its vehicles, posing risks to our national security," President Joe Biden said in a statement. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said the administration was taking action "before Chinese manufactured vehicles become widespread in the United States and potentially threaten our privacy and national security." The White House also said vehicles could "be piloted or disabled remotely" and added the investigation will also look at autonomous vehicles. The Commerce Department will seek comments for 60 days on the potential risks of Chinese connected vehicles and then consider drafting regulations to address concerns.
Persons: Joe Biden, I'm, Biden, Gina Raimondo, Raimondo Organizations: U.S . Commerce Department, Commerce Department, Embassy, The Commerce Department, United, Huawei, U.S Locations: United States, China, Asia, East, Europe, U.S, Mexico, Washington
Chinese airlines can boost U.S. flights to 50 per week, U.S. says
  + stars: | 2024-02-27 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Chinese passenger airlines will be allowed to boost their weekly round-trip U.S. flights to 50 starting on March 31, up from the current 35, the U.S. Transportation Department, or USDOT, said on Monday, returning the market to about one-third of pre-pandemic levels. Chinese passenger airlines will be allowed to boost their weekly round-trip U.S. flights to 50 starting on March 31, up from the current 35, the U.S. Transportation Department, or USDOT, said on Monday, returning the market to about one-third of pre-pandemic levels. More than 150 weekly round-trip passenger flights were allowed by each side before restrictions were imposed in early 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but until August 2023, Chinese and U.S. carriers could each fly only 12 a week between the two countries. The number rose on Sept. 1 to 18 weekly round-trips and then to 24 per week starting Oct. 29. Reuters reported last June that newly approved Chinese flights to the United States were not overflying Russia, which would have given them a shorter flight time and fuel advantage over U.S. rivals blocked from Russian airspace.
Organizations: U.S . Transportation Department, U.S ., Reuters Locations: U.S, China, United States, Russia
Brandon Bell | Getty Images News | Getty ImagesChecked bag fees represent big revenueA checked bag is one stored in a plane's cargo hold during a flight. While that service was free in years past, it's now standard for major airlines to charge for checked bags. By late 2023, it was about double for many carriers: $30 to $35 for one checked bag, Nastro said. Fly with certain airlinesDaniel Garrido | Moment | Getty ImagesThere are a few airlines that still don't charge for a checked bag. Those who wait to pay until arriving at the gate, for example, would pay $99 for a checked bag or carry-on, the chart indicates.
Persons: Brandon Bell, it's, Nastro, Eric Napoli, Daniel Garrido, Emirates —, Aiden Higgins, Higgins, Vondruska, Napoli Organizations: Getty, U.S, Bureau, Transportation, Airlines — Qatar Airways, Etihad Airways, Emirates, Air, Napoli, Spirit Airlines Locations: U.S, New York, Los Angeles
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