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Officials from the United States and European Union today signed the second-stage Open Skies agreement, affirming and expanding 2007's landmark transatlantic bilateral as per terms the two sides agreed to in March this year.

In addition to affirming the first-stage agreement, the new deal gives U.S. airlines greater night-flying rights in Europe and lifts some restrictions imposed by the U.S. Fly America Act, but makes no changes to U.S. foreign ownership rules or restrictions on European airlines serving intra-U.S. routes, a disappointment to some in the EU.

Additionally, the U.S. Department of Transportation also said the agreement calls for further cooperation between the United States and the European Union in aviation security, safety, competition and environmental issues in addition to "a ground-breaking article on the importance of high labor standards in the airline industry."

State Department deputy assistant secretary for transportation affairs and chief U.S. negotiator for the new bilateral aviation agreement John Byerly, who plans to retire in September, told BTN in April that once the deal is signed, "The agreement will provisionally be applied by the two sides, meaning it will apply in practice, but then formal ratification is required by parliaments in some of the European countries."

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