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Air Canada and airBaltic announced this week that the two airlines have signed a codeshare agreement. This will provide passengers easy connections when flying between Canada and the Baltic states. This agreement goes into effect on November 6th.
Air Canada will add its marketing code to 10 routes operated by airBaltic. These include: Vilnius International Airport (VNO), Riga Airport (RIX), Tallinn Airport (TLL), Copenhagen Airport (CPH), Amsterdam Airport Schiphol (AMS), Stockholm Arlanda Airport (ARN), and several other European cities. airBaltic will place its marketing code on two routes operated by Air Canada. These include Toronto Pearson International Airport (YYZ) to both Copenhagen Airport (CPH) and Amsterdam Airport Schiphol (AMS).
Mark Galardo, Executive Vice President, Revenue and Network Planning at Air Canada, said:
Air Canada is very pleased to expand its longstanding relationship with airBaltic to enable greater connectivity and customer convenience when traveling between Canada and Northern Europe. This new codeshare partnership serves the growing travel demand between Canada and the Baltic region and builds on Air Canada’s global growth strategy by leveraging its extensive, non-stop network from Canada to Scandinavia and key European gateways including Amsterdam.”
Martin Gauss, President and CEO at airBaltic, added:
We are pleased to announce our codeshare agreement with our long-term interline partner Air Canada, providing our customers with enhanced connectivity. This new codeshare partnership will now offer both airBaltic and Air Canada travellers expanded travel options between all three Baltic capitals and Canada, with a seamless one-stop connection through other European cities. We are looking forward to successful, long-term collaboration.”
The two airlines are exploring adding additional benefits for members of both loyalty programs.
Anthony’s Take: I have flown airBaltic throughout Europe and enjoyed flying with the airline. This codeshare arrangement will make it easier for passengers of both airlines to explore Canada and the Baltic states with one connection on a single ticket.
(Image Credits: Air Canada and airBaltic.)
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Advertiser & Editorial Disclosure: The Bulkhead Seat earns an affiliate commission for anyone approved through the links above This compensation may impact how and where links appear on this site. We work to provide the best publicly available offers to our readers. We frequently update them, but this site does not include all available offers. Opinions, reviews, analyses & recommendations are the author’s alone, and have not been reviewed, endorsed, or approved by any of these entities.