IATA has called on the British government to
improve its global competitiveness in air transport by taking a
global approach to aviation and climate change, reducing taxes,
changing the economic regulatory structure for airports, and
developing what it calls “a proper strategy to safeguard the
economic benefits of aviation”.
“The UK has a great tradition of leadership in
aviation. But any industry can only take so many knocks before the
damage is permanent. I respect the UK for its historic role but to
write a successful next chapter, we must say ‘basta’. The
government’s policy pillars of excessive taxes, inefficient
airport regulation and limiting growth will destroy the UK’s proud
aviation legacy,” said Giovanni Bisignani, IATA’s Director General
and CEO in a speech to the Aviation Club in London.
Bisignani noted that aviation supports about 1.5 million UK jobs
along with $76 billion in economic activity. “Aviation provides
critical global connectivity to this island nation. It is a great
mystery to me why the government seems so intent on destroying its competitiveness with a policy agenda stuck in the past,” said Bisignani. To support aviation’s economic benefits, he called for
urgent policy action in the following areas:
Cost: The
World Economic Forum’s Travel and Tourism Competitiveness report
ranks the UK last out of 133 countries for cost competitiveness,
129th on fuel prices, and 121st on ticket taxes and airport
charges. Bisignani took aim at the UK’s “phantom regulator” as one
of the causes of weak cost competitiveness. “Recent decisions have
got it all wrong. While the global airline industry was cutting costs and improving efficiencies to survive, the regulator allowed
BAA a 50% increase for Heathrow charges. He was even more generous
for 2008-2013, with an 86% increase. The economic regulatory model
for airports is broken and must be urgently fixed,” said Bisignani.
Capacity: “With the decision to abandon plans for a third
runway, London Heathrow is becoming a secondary hub,” said Bisignani. Heathrow has two runways limiting its growth compared
to other major European hubs with greater runway
capacity - Amsterdam has five runways while Paris, Madrid and soon
Frankfurt will have four. Commenting on the ability of high-speed
rail to take up the slack, Bisignani said, “If building 2,000
meters of runway takes decades, building or upgrading 650 km of
rail will take several lifetimes. And it will probably take more
money than the Chancellor of the Exchequer could write a check
for.” Noting that the government came to power with many policy
decisions in hand, he hoped that “with experience, the policies
would become more realistic.”
Selling the government’s
share in UK NATS: Bisignani, who sits on the Board of UK NATS,
urged the government to consider carefully the sale of its shares
in UK NATS. “The corporatized NATS, with industry and government
working together as shareholders, has delivered many benefits. It
is more efficient, and more focused on its customers, than when it
was a government-run monopoly. Efficient air traffic management
contributes to the success of business connectivity. Any change to
the structure of NATS must be carefully considered. A golden share
or keeping some of the shares for the government is an option, and
any change must include an effective regulatory structure that
drives further efficiencies,” said Bisignani.
Winter
weather: Bisignani called for better preparedness for severe
weather in the wake of major airport shutdowns in December. “The inconvenience to passengers and the paralysis of the UK economy
for many days is unacceptable from any perspective. Shoveling snow
is not the airline’s responsibility. The financial losses they
suffered must be compensated, and we must approach next winter
with a better plan,” said Bisignani.
Climate change: Bisignani criticized the UK government for taking an isolated and
punitive policy approach to managing aviation’s emissions,
particularly with the Air Passenger Duty now standing as a GBP2.7
billion burden on the industry. “That is enough to offset all of
UK emissions - not once, but four times. To borrow a UK phrase ‘this
is potty’. Environment policy should not be designed around paying
the bills for the government’s failure to effectively regulate the
financial sector,” said Bisignani. He called for an immediate end
to the unjustified burden of Air Passenger Duty and for the UK and
Europe to cooperate on a global framework for economic measures coordinated through ICAO. Bisignani also called on the government
to support the commercialization of biofuels, with the potential
to reduce aviation’s carbon footprint by up to 80% and to
stimulate the economy at the same time. “Aviation is united and
committed to improving fuel efficiency by 1.5% per year to 2020,
capping net emissions from 2020 through carbon-neutral growth, and
cutting net emissions in half by 2050, compared to 2005 levels,”
he said.
Bisignani’s calls for renewed competitiveness
came as the air transport industry starts what is expected to be a
second consecutive year of profitability, albeit weak, following
major losses over the last decade. Following a $15.1 billion
profit in 2010, IATA is predicting that global profits will shrink
to $9.1 billion in 2011.
“For an industry that generates nearly
$600 billion in revenues the margins are pathetic. The 2.7% margin
that airlines earned last year does not even cover the cost of
capital which is around 7-8%. And the margin will shrink to 1.5%
this year,” said Bisignani.
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