dowlingm
Senior Member
Either Air Canada has commercial control (the ability to forbid the rail operator to make codeshares other than with AC/Star Alliance) or it doesn’t. Transport Canada could presumably regulate the rail operator to require them to make any reservation system interface open to all operators that can use that interface without favouritism, subject to a defined financial arrangement.Air Canada replacing its short-haul YOW-YUL flights through a codeshare agreement with a railroad does not necessitate necessitate Air Canada to assume any commercial control over the rail operator. In fact, such an arrangement will likely hurt competition, as AC has every incentive to deny other airlines to replicate such codeshare agreements.
That would not necessarily prevent AC / Star from taking other steps to assert their branding such as station naming/advertising etc., but the likes of KLM might still prefer that than running buses to and from Ottawa.