Korean Air and Asiana Airlines aircraft at Incheon International Airport (File photo, courtesy of Yonhap) Europe's antitrust regulator has temporarily suspended its investigation into the proposed merger of Korean Air Lines Co. and Asiana Airlines Inc. as the country’s flagship carrier sought more time to prepare measures to address competition concerns.
Korean Air said on Thursday the European Commission has decided to postpone the conclusion of its probe, which had been scheduled for Aug. 3. The watchdog agency is likely to make its decision on the deal to create the world’s No. 7 carrier around October, airline industry sources in Seoul said.
“We have requested a deadline extension to render comprehensive remedies that can address the European Commission’s concerns, and the European Commission approved the request,” a Korean Air official said.
“We will soon submit a remedy package and finalize the discussion with the authority within the new deadline to get a final approval.”
The deal is under investigation by the US, the European Commission and Japan’s antitrust bodies. Meanwhile, 14 nations including South Korea, China, Australia, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam have already given it the nod.
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