The Thai government has deposited to the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) Thailand’s instrument of accession to the Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules for International Carriage by Air.

ICAO, a United Nations specialized agency, said  Dr. Vijavat Isarabhakdi, ambassador of Thailand to Canada and the state’s permanent representative to ICAO, made the deposit on behalf of his government August 3, 2017 at the ICAO headquarters. Thailand’s accession will enter into force on October 2, 2017.

The ceremony was conducted in the presence of John V. Augustin, director of ICAO Legal Affairs and External Relations Bureau. Ambassador Isarabhakdi was accompanied on the occasion by Adisak Jantatum, counselor, Royal Thai Embassy in Ottawa.

The Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules for International Carriage by Air, done in Montreal on May 28, 1999, provides, within a consolidated and uniform framework, the rules relating to the international carriage of passengers, baggage, and cargo performed by aircraft for reward.

The Montreal Convention of 1999 facilitates the use of simplified and modernized documents (electronic records) of carriage (passenger tickets; air waybills), permitting substantive operational savings for operators  and the ability to manage risks more efficiently through the use of electronically produced and simplified documents of carriage, especially in the air cargo field.

Photo: Nutjaru

You May Also Like

Indonesia’s Garuda to reformat passenger planes to hold more freight

Garuda Indonesia said it will restructure its passenger planes to make room for more cargo in response to what it sees is the rising…

2013 outlook improves as airfreight rebounds

World airfreight forecasts for 2013 have taken a more positive note as cargo markets rebounded strongly in November 2012, the International Air Transport Association…

New BOC ruling on higher tariff ‘disastrous’ to meat processing industry—exporters

The Philippine Exporters Foundation Region III (PhilExport R3) is requesting the Bureau of Customs (BOC) to reconsider the reclassification of tariff headings for certain…

Ocean carriers reverting to core port services

Carriers will be increasingly restricted to its core strength—providing port-to-port services—as they continue to be squeezed out of the integrated logistics services industry, predicts…