Montreal Convention


The Montreal Convention is a multilateral treaty adopted by a diplomatic meeting of ICAO member states in 1999. It amended important provisions of the Warsaw Convention's regime concerning compensation for the victims of air disasters. The Convention attempts to re-establish uniformity and predictability of rules relating to the international carriage of passengers, baggage and cargo. Whilst maintaining the core provisions which have served the international air transport community for several decades, the new treaty achieves modernization in a number of key areas. It protects passengers by introducing a two-tier liability system that eliminates the previous requirement of proving willful neglect by the air carrier to obtain more than US$75,000 in damages, which should eliminate or reduce protracted litigation.

Damages

Under the Montreal Convention, air carriers are strictly liable for proven damages up to 128,821.00 special drawing rights, a mix of currency values established by the International Monetary Fund equal to roughly US$175,000. Where damages of more than 128,821.00 SDR are sought, the airline may avoid liability by proving that the accident which caused the injury or death was not due to their negligence or was attributable solely to the negligence of a third party. This defense is not available where damages of less than 128,821.00 SDR are sought. The Convention also amended the jurisdictional provisions of Warsaw and now allows the victim or their families to sue foreign carriers where they maintain their principal residence, and requires all air carriers to carry liability insurance.
The Montreal Convention was brought about mainly to amend liabilities to be paid to families for death or injury whilst on board an aircraft.

No compensation purely for psychiatric injury

The Convention does not recognize compensation for psychiatric injury or damage unless linked to physical injury. Article 17 of the Convention refers to "bodily injury" in setting out the liability of the carrier for accidents. Purely psychiatric injury is not eligible for compensation which has been criticised by people injured in plane accidents, legal experts and their families.

Australia

Australia changed its law so as to fit with the Montreal Convention including in some of the following ways
Independent Australian senator Nick Xenophon will introduce a private member's bill into the Australian Parliament in May 2015 which will seek to protect the rights of plane crash survivors to be compensated for psychological trauma.
Leading Australian current affairs TV show 4 Corners on the government owned broadcaster ABC, broadcast a program focusing on the unfairness and injustice of excluding psychiatric injury on March 23, 2015 featuring Karen Casey, a nurse injured when the medical evacuation flight she was nursing on crashed in the waters off Norfolk Island.

Lost baggage

The Montreal Convention changes and generally increases the maximum liability of airlines for lost baggage to a fixed amount 1,131 SDR per passenger. It requires airlines to fully compensate travelers the cost of replacement items purchased until the baggage is delivered, to a maximum of 1,131 SDR. At 21 days any delayed baggage is considered lost, until the airline finds and delivers it.

Disabled passengers and mobility equipment

The limitation of compensation for damage to baggage to 1,131 SDRs means that the value of damaged mobility equipment may often significantly exceed available compensation under the Montreal Convention, while the effect of the loss, even temporarily, of mobility equipment places disabled passengers at a substantially increased disadvantage in comparison to other passengers suffering damaged baggage. While for non-disabled people the major issue is the loss of hold baggage, for disabled people the problem tends to be physical damage to wheelchairs and other durable medical equipment due to inappropriate stowage in the hold. Even a basic individually-fitted wheelchair may cost twice the available compensation, with a three-month lead time for replacement. There have been further problems with airlines being reluctant to recognise that cheap mass-market wheelchairs may be unsuitable as even a temporary replacement due to the common need for customised seating solutions among long-term wheelchair users.
The EU in "Communication on the scope of the liability of air carriers and airports in the event of destroyed, damaged or lost mobility equipment of passengers with reduced mobility when traveling by air" notes this disadvantage in relation to EC 1107/2006 "rights of disabled persons and persons with reduced mobility when traveling by air".
The EU report notes that the United States under the Air Carrier Access Act and Canada under Part VII of the Air Transport Regulations have taken action to force airlines to fully cover the costs of damage to mobility equipment as a condition of allowing an airline to operate in their airspace, and notes that the EU may have to take similar steps if the additional duties imposed on airlines by EC 1107/2006 do not resolve the issue.

Ratifications

As September 2018, there are 133 parties to the Convention. Included in this total is 132 of the 191 ICAO Member States plus the European Union. The states that have ratified represent 131 UN member states plus the Cook Islands. Other states that have ratified include Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, all member states of the European Union, India, Indonesia, Israel, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Nepal Norway, Pakistan, Russia Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Africa, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine, the United Arab Emirates, and the United States.
Member stateDate of entry into forceNotes
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
19 12 2004
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
28 6 2004
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
-None International Protocol
14 2 2010
15 6 2010
24 1 2009
28 6 2004
11 4 2015
Signed. Not ratified
4 11 2003
Signed. Not ratified
4 11 2003
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
28 6 2004
4 11 2003
29 5 2004
-None International Protocol
5 7 2015
8 5 2007
4 11 2003
18 7 2006
-Warsaw Convention
9 1 2004
25 8 2013
-None International Protocol
22 10 2004
Signed. Not ratified
4 11 2003
4 11 2003
Signed. Not ratified
-None International Protocol
18 5 2009
31 7 2005
4 11 2003
-Warsaw Convention
17 2 2012
8 8 2011
5 4 2015
23 3 2008
13 12 2005
4 11 2003
4 11 2003
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
19 9 2014
28 6 2004
-None International Protocol
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
20 11 2007
26 8 2006
25 4 2005
6 1 2008
17 11 2015
-None International Protocol
4 11 2003
22 6 2014
9 1 2016
28 6 2004
28 6 2004
5 4 2014
9 5 2004
18 2 2011
28 6 2004
Signed. Not ratified
4 11 2003
-Hague Protocol
6 8 2016
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
-None International Protocol
21 2 2015
-None International Protocol
16 1 2016
7 1 2005
16 8 2004
30 6 2009
19 5 2017
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
28 6 2004
20 3 2011
28 6 2004
5 9 2009
4 11 2003
4 11 2003
31 8 2015
4 11 2003
-None International Protocol
4 11 2003
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
15 2 2005
14 5 2005
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
-Warsaw Convention
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
28 6 2004
29 1 2005
28 6 2004
26 2 2007
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
29 2 2008
30 12 2005
16 3 2008
4 7 2004
-None International Protocol
-Warsaw Convention
3 4 2017
4 11 2003
-None International Protocol
17 10 2004
4 12 2004
16 3 2010
14 6 2010
28 3 2014
-Warsaw Convention
4 11 2003
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
23 08 2018
28 6 2004
4 11 2003
-None International Protocol
Signed. Not ratified
4 11 2003
28 6 2004
27 7 2007
17 2 2007
-None International Protocol
4 11 2003
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
4 11 2003
4 11 2003
18 12 2015
18 3 2006
4 11 2003
14 11 2005
29 12 2007
16 5 2009
4 11 2003
21 8 2017
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
-None International Protocol
-None International Protocol
28 5 2004
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
-None International Protocol
-None International Protocol
14 12 2003
6 11 2016
4 4 2010
12 11 2010
24 1 2016
16 11 2007
4 11 2003
4 11 2003
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
-None International Protocol
21 1 2007
-None International Protocol
28 6 2004
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
Signed. Not ratified
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
22 1 2017
28 6 2004
5 9 2005
4 11 2003
-None International Protocol
2 10 2017
4 11 2003
-None International Protocol
26 11 2016
19 1 2004
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
26 3 2011
-Warsaw Convention
-None International Protocol
-Warsaw Convention
5 5 2009
4 11 2003
28 6 2004
4 11 2003
4 11 2003
4 4 2008
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
8 1 2006
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol
Signed. Not ratified
-Warsaw Convention & Hague Protocol