

On 27 September 2018, Vietnam deposited its instrument of accession to MC99 at the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO). It will enter into force in Vietnam on 26 November 2018.
This will be seen as a positive step by airlines and the International Air Transport Association (IATA), which have lobbied for global ratification and adoption of MC99 to bring an end to the patchwork of liability regimes that continue to exist around the world.
Vietnam was a party to the previous air carriage conventions, namely the Warsaw Convention 1929 (WC29) and subsequent Protocol to Amend the Warsaw Convention of 1929, The Hague, 28 September 1955 (HP55).
MC99 modernises these dated Conventions. In particular, it will assist carriers in the following areas:
The ratification of MC99 will support the continued growth of Vietnam’s aviation sector and resulted from significant lobbying by IATA and national flag carrier, Vietnam Airlines.
IATA figures suggest that an additional US$600 billion in bilateral trade has been opened up to the use of eAWBs as a result of states ratifying MC99 in the period since 2013, with Vietnam representing US$106 billion of this trade.
Vietnam also has one of the fastest-growing aviation markets globally, with the average sector growth rate of 17.4% being far higher than the 7.9% growth in Asia Pacific as a whole.
Civil Aviation Administration of Vietnam (CAAV) figures also state that the annual passenger growth rate averaged 16% between 2010 and 2017, while cargo growth averaged 14% in the same period.
In January 2015, the ASEAN Open Skies Policy was implemented, allowing airlines to fly freely throughout the ASEAN member states in a unified air transport market. Other factors driving aviation passenger and cargo growth in Vietnam are:
Vietnam is the 134th party to MC99 (there are 192 ICAO member states). There has been much activity in relation to the global uptake in recent years with Philippines (2015), Thailand (2017), Indonesia (2017) and Russia (2017) all having ratified MC99.
Ghana, Niger and Tunisia also became parties to MC99 in 2018.
Nepal and Sri Lanka have also recently passed enabling legislation and should be depositing instruments of ratification with ICAO before the end of the year. Only a small number of states with sizeable international aviation markets are still to ratify MC99; the two most significant being Bangladesh and Algeria.
For more information on the implications of MC99’s ratification in Vietnam, please contact the authors of this briefing:
Mert Hifzi
Partner
T +65 6411 5303
E mert.hifzi@hfw.com
James Jordan
Senior Associate
T +65 6411 5374
E james.jordan@hfw.com
Download a PDF version of ‘Vietnam ratifies the Montréal Convention 1999’