Abu Dhabi to get US Customs pre-clearance

The Wall Street Journal reported a few days ago, that the White House has agreed to open a Customs & Border Protection outpost in Abu Dhabi, which will help passengers flying out from the AUH airport to pre-clear American Customs & Immigration formalities before getting on that plane.

The CBP has been offering this facility to some countries, such as Canada, Ireland and its Caribbean counterparts, but this is for the first time it is going almost half way across the world to the Middle-East to offer such a service. Who benefits? Etihad Airways, but naturally, since they are the only ones who currently fly non-stops between the USA and UAE from that airport.

Interestingly, this news is coming out in the midst of the sequester cuts, which like View From the Wing writes, are going to add to travel times and delays. And guess the response? That Abu Dhabi is going to foot the bill on this one.

Obviously, Etihad and the Abu Dhabi are trying to size up to Emirates, which is now one of the bigger boys of aviation and are adding up as many USPs they can try to as a late starter, including the Equity Alliance.

And not surprisingly, a lot of criticism is coming from the American and European airline groups on this one, and from members of the Congress themselves. Quoting the link above,

Both the AEA and A4A claim the deal, signed recently between the US and the UAE and which will involve the stationing of US Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) officers in Abu Dhabi thereby allowing passengers to clear US immigration procedures when embarking in the Emirate, will give Etihad a “competitive advantage” while at the same time “being detrimental to a level playing field in the transatlantic aviation market.” The AEA went on the claim that the measure in Abu Dhabi has a distortive knock-on effect on the EU-US transport market, as at present, in order to avoid long security queues during rush hours at US ports of entry, European airlines are forced to change their flight schedules, putting “connectivity, commercial opportunities and passenger convenience” at stake. Echoing the AEA, the A4A called on the US Department of Homeland Security to drop the plan, saying it “disadvantages US citizens and other visitors who are not adequately served by the CBP today, often waiting hours to clear customs when returning to the United States.”

We’ll see how this plays out, but this sure may be a crowd puller for the Asian market which may look at AUH as a potential hub. Who knows the American airlines will drop the protests quietly as well and start a flight or few to AUH. And the next requests for such a gateway will come from, not surprisingly, another Middle-East based airline.

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About Ajay

Ajay Awtaney is the Founder and Editor of Live From A Lounge (LFAL), a pioneering digital platform renowned for publishing news and views about aviation, hotels, passenger experience, loyalty programs, travel trends and frequent travel tips for the Global Indian. He is considered the Indian authority on business travel, luxury travel, frequent flyer miles, loyalty credit cards and travel for Indians around the globe. Ajay is a frequent contributor and commentator on the media as well, including ET Now, BBC, CNBC TV18, NDTV, Conde Nast Traveller and many other outlets.

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  1. There are dozens of airports that deserve pre clearance facilities before AUH, no matter who foots the bill. It is not the government’s job to pick winners and losers, which they are trying to do in giving Etihad exclusive access to pre clearance facilities.

  2. Does this mean when flights from AUH land in the USA, passengers won’t have to go through the long immigration lines? If so, then this benefits non-US citizens the most since those lines tend to be the longest upon arrival in the USA.

  3. it’s good and bad. for any connecting passengers, say BOM-AUH-ORD, I would have to allow for a lot of extra time to deal with pre-clearance at my transit point instead of enjoying the facilities at AUH

    Also, once you pass the pre-clearance zone, technically you’ve entered the US, so you’ll be fenced off in a sterile area that probably would have a much more limited selection of food and shopping.

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