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British Airways moved significantly closer to finalizing its merger with Iberia yesterday after the United Kingdom flag carrier announced it has reached agreement with the trustees of its two pension schemes to address its $5.6 billion pensions deficit.

Iberia chairman Antonio Vazquez reiterated earlier this month that his airline would walk away from the deal unless BA addressed its gaping pensions hole, one of the United Kingdom's largest. BA already has reached agreement on tackling the problem with its unions and, now that the trustees are onboard, it will submit a full recovery plan to the U.K. Pensions Regulator by June 30. Iberia has three months to decide whether it too approves of the plan, which will see BA plug the deficit out of its own funds.

The agreement avoids closing either of the two new schemes now, with BA continuing to contribute £330 million per year, rising 3 percent annually, until one of the schemes closes in 2023 and the other in 2026. BA will make additional contributions in years where its cash balance exceeds £1.8 billion, and existing employees will be allowed to make additional top-up contributions.

The one foreseeable barrier to the new BA proposal is that the U.K. regulator wants all company pension deficits to be eliminated over the next ten years, whereas the BA plan is for up to 16 years.

BA and Iberia announced on April 8 that they hope to merge by the end of 2010 as International Airlines Group, serving 61.5 million passengers annually to 200 destinations.

Separately, the BA cabin crew union Unite said Tuesday that it would hold a vote for a new strike unless the airline resolves the dispute by June 29.

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