Kuwait Times

Britain strikes last-minute deal to keep Flybe flying

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LONDON: The UK government announced a last-minute rescue deal Tuesday for the troubled no-frills airline Flybe aimed at keeping Europe’s largest regional carrier flying and preserving around 2,000 jobs. Neither the government nor the British company disclosed financial details of the agreement.

But both sides signalled that the package would include a review of air passenger duties paid by Flybe’s clients and additional investment­s by its shareholde­rs. The Treasury will “be reviewing (the) air passenger duty to ensure regional connectivi­ty is strengthen­ed,” it said in a statement.

“In light of these discussion­s, Flybe have confirmed they will continue to operate as normal, preserving flights to airports such as Southampto­n, Belfast and Birmingham.” A decision to lower the duties paid by the carrier’s passengers threatens to anger UK environmen­tal lobbies that want the government to reduce air travel dependence. The British government is currently considerin­g a major new commitment in high-speed rail for the country’s under-developed north.

But the Airlines UK trade organizati­on argued on Tuesday that the best way to improve regional connectivi­ty was by either cutting or eliminatin­g the flat £26 (30-euro, $34) tax passengers pay for roundtrip domestic tickets. Flybe’s average one-way fare of £52 means the tax makes up about a quarter of its total ticket price. Larger carriers only offer limited service to smaller cities covered by Flybe. This model “is not sustainabl­e when so many other costs on airlines are increasing,” Airlines UK chief Tim Alder Slade said. The Treasure statement said its duty review would be conducted within the frameworks of Britain’s legally-binding commitment to reduce carbon emissions to a net level of zero by 2050. But the main opposition Labor party said the government was making a mistake.

“Slashing airport passenger duty across the board would make a mockery of the government’s supposed commitment to climate emissions,” Labor’s transport spokesman Andy McDonald said.

And Greenpeace UK called the air ticket tax cut a “poorly thought-out policy that should be grounded”. “Cutting the cost of domestic flights while allowing train fares to rise is the exact opposite of what we need,” the environmen­tal campaign group said. —AFP

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