Travelport has reached a commercial agreement with Air France-KLM to enable the distribution of the airline group’s NDC content via the Travelport+ content distribution and travel retailing platform.
Agents that sign an access agreement with Air France-KLM will be able to access its NDC content and services through the agency point-of-sale Smartpoint, or through API connections.

Pieter Bootsma, chief revenue officer at Air France-KLM, said: “This is an important step in our distribution strategy, complementing our existing NDC distribution network.
“NDC is a key innovation for Air France-KLM as it allows our customers to benefit from more attractive and customised offers, such as continuous pricing and tailor-made bundles. It is an outstanding technological step opening up brand new retailing perspectives in the future.”
Jason Clarke, CCO – travel partners at Travelport, added: “This is an innovative deal which truly maximises value for both Air France-KLM and Travelport’s global community of travel agencies, particularly those with a higher level of servicing needs.
“We are enhancing our longstanding partnership with Air France-KLM and are pleased to be able to offer the airline group’s differentiated NDC content alongside its traditional content to our customers.”
Travelport and Air France-KLM are well progressed on the technical solution for NDC distribution. NDC content will be rolled out from early 2022, with features and functionality to be added progressively.



























Thailand’s prime minister Prayut Chan-o-cha has confirmed the cabinet’s decision to maintain the RT-PCR Covid-19 testing for international arrivals under the Test & Go quarantine exemption scheme, reversing an earlier approved plan to allow travellers to take an antigen test, as part of measures to control the spread of the new Omicron variant.
The relaxed requirements, which were supposed to kick in on December 16, would have applied to travellers from 63 countries and territories who are allowed to enter under the test-and-go scheme, according to a report from the Bangkok Post.
The report quoted deputy public health minister, Sathit Pitutecha, as saying on Monday that “RT-PCR tests are more accurate than ATK tests, which is important to help prevent an Omicron outbreak in Thailand.”
Since December 1, foreign travellers from eight countries in southern Africa, namely, Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe, have been barred from entering to keep the variant out of Thailand, according to Apisamai Srirangson, assistant spokeswoman of the Centre of Covid-19 Situation Administration.
Thais arriving from those countries will still be allowed to enter, but they will have to serve a 14-day quarantine.