EU Hopes Malaysia Will Join ASEAN-EU Comprehensive Air Traffic Agreement

European Union hopes Malaysia will join the other 36 EU and Asean states in ratifying the Asean-EU Comprehensive Air Traffic Agreement (AE CATA), the world’s first bloc-to-bloc air transport agreement.

AE CATA aims to bolster connectivity and economic development among member states of the two regional blocs.

Malaysia signed the Agreement on October 17 last year but has not yet joined the other Asean and EU member states in ratifying it.

The Agreement provides that Malaysia can join the ratification at a later stage when it is ready to do so.

EU Ambassador to Malaysia Michalis Rokas said the door is open for Malaysia ‘to come onboard’ and it should reconsider the immense opportunities beyond better air connectivity and linkages that the agreement will bring to its signatories.

He said with thousands of European companies currently operating in Malaysia and 40 percent of EU goods going through Malaysia’s international waters, the country is an important gateway of the EU to the ASEAN market and is set to benefit from the agreement.

Malaysia, strategically located in the Southeast Asia region, is home to important aeronautical industrial activities by Airbus and hosts some of the biggest European corporations including Ericsson, Nokia, Siemens, B. Braun, BASF, Leonardo, AT&S, Volvo, and many more.

“Hopefully Malaysia will join the application (ratification) and benefit from the agreement. We have not excluded Malaysia, on the contrary, we want Malaysia to be in as soon as possible” he told Bernama when met here recently.

Signed in Bali, Indonesia by all 27 EU member states and 10 ASEAN members, the AE CATA provides a foundation for closer cooperation between the two blocs’ areas such as aviation safety, air traffic management, consumer protection, environment, and also social matters.

The new agreement also replaced all EU Member States’ bilateral aviation agreements with the ten ASEAN member states and provides a single, modern framework for air services between the EU and ASEAN.

The EU is one of its biggest trading partners of Malaysia after Singapore, China, and the United States. The total two-way trade in 2022 exceeded RM216 billion, with Malaysia enjoying a large trade surplus with the EU.

The vast majority of traded goods are electric and electronics as well as machinery and equipment.

The EU is also the third largest importer of Malaysia’s palm oil and palm-based products after India and China

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