Daily Express

Airport slot review to help aviation take off

- By Neil Lancefield

A REVIEW of airport slot allocation will form part of a five- year recovery plan for the aviation industry, the Department for Transport has announced.

Ministers want to ensure the process “encourages competitio­n and provides the connectivi­ty that UK consumers need”, the department said.

The DfT made the comment in its response to a report by the Commons’ Transport Select Committee into the impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic on aviation, which urged the Government to “explore every avenue available” to guarantee slot rules “do not unfairly impact passengers”.

This came after more than 100 MPs backed union calls for British Airways to be stripped of some of its valuable slots at Heathrow due to the treatment of its workforce.

Slots – which give an airline the right to take off and land at an airport – can be worth millions of pounds each and are generally allocated to incumbent airlines.

British Airways, which holds the majority at Heathrow, announced a plan to cut up to 12,000 jobs in April.

Unions claimed it operated a “fire and rehire” system which saw many remaining employees having their terms and conditions downgraded.

The carrier insisted it tried to “protect as many jobs as possible”. The DfT said it will “consider the role of the slot system” as part of a recovery plan to be published this autumn but noted it is “legally prevented from intervenin­g” in the allocation process. The overall strategy will be “broad in scope” and devised “in the context of the Government’s green ambitions”, the DfT said.

It is expected to cover issues such as: how the industry can return to growth; workers and skills; consumer protection; and climate change.

The DfT did not engage with the committee’s recommenda­tions for health screening at airports or common internatio­nal health standards as a way of reducing quarantine restrictio­ns.

Committee chairman Huw Merriman said: “The publicatio­n of an aviation recovery plan is welcome but it cannot come quick enough for a sector devastated by the impact of coronaviru­s. Our report expressed a desire to see more pace and detail on Government action to address the crisis. We await the Government’s aviation recovery plan and will look carefully at how Government intends to deal with some of the specific points in our report.”

 ??  ?? STRATEGY: The DfT says it wants to ‘ encourage competitio­n’ in the industry
STRATEGY: The DfT says it wants to ‘ encourage competitio­n’ in the industry

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