A failure by the United States and European Union to reach a new agreement next month on the provision of passenger data for trans-Atlantic flights could ground up to 105,000 people each week, the International Air Transport Association’s (IATA) director general said Thursday.The two sides need to reach a new accord by the end of September, after the European Court of Justice ruled in May that the current agreement is unacceptable. That agreement calls for airlines to provide U.S. authorities with the names, addresses, ticket payment details and telephone numbers of passengers on U.S.-bound flights. The European Union’s highest court ruled that there is no “appropriate legal basis” for the deal, and said it would cease to be valid in October.If a new agreement isn’t reached before then, airlines will be forced to decide whether to continue providing the information in violation of European privacy law, withhold the information in violation of U.S. law or ground flights to avoid breaking any law, said Giovanni Bisignani, director general and CEO of IATA, at a news conference in Tokyo. SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe “I hope that there will be an agreement because I know that the cooperation between the Homeland Security and European Union is strong and effective,” he said. “I think there is time to find a decision,” Bisignani said. “It’s not up to me to say which is the best decision. It’s up to me to say I look forward to increased cooperation and increased discussion between the two parties because we cannot be in a situation on September 30 when we have to make the decision which law to break.”Bisignani’s comments came two days after U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff wrote in The Washington Post that the United States needs continued access to the personal information on passengers, and also wants the rules relaxed on how the information can be used. The U.S. Customs and Border Protection receives the information regularly, he wrote, but cannot share it freely with investigators in other Department of Homeland Security divisions, Immigration and Customs Enforcement or with the FBI, “never mind with our allies in London.”“This information might yet identify associates of those arrested in the plot in Britain, but the rules blind us in routinely searching for that connection,” Chertoff wrote.The United States says the data allows it to identify certain passengers for additional screening when they arrive in the country while reducing the amount of time spent on screening low-risk passengers.-Martyn Williams, IDG News Service (Tokyo Bureau)Check out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content news Nominations extended for CIO100 ASEAN Awards 2023 By Shirin Robert Oct 02, 2023 2 mins IDG Events IT Leadership brandpost Unlocking value: Oracle enterprise license models for optimal ROI Helping you maximize your return on investment of Oracle software program licenses is not as complex as it sounds—learn more today. By Rimini Street Oct 02, 2023 4 mins Managed IT Services IT Management brandpost Lessons from the field: Why you need a platform engineering practice (…and how to build it) Adopting platform engineering will better serve customers and provide invaluable support to their development teams. By VMware Tanzu Vanguards Oct 02, 2023 6 mins Software Deployment Devops feature The dark arts of digital transformation — and how to master them Sometimes IT leaders need a little magic to push digital initiatives forward. Here are five ways to make transformation obstacles disappear. By Dan Tynan Oct 02, 2023 11 mins Business IT Alignment Digital Transformation IT Strategy Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe