Cape Times

European airlines bent on more competitio­n, cutting taxes and limiting strikes

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BRUSSELS: In the first meeting of its kind, five chief executives from Europe’s biggest airlines met yesterday to lobby EU lawmakers to increase competitio­n at European airports, lower taxes and limit labour strikes.

“Europe needs a common strategy and comprehens­ive plan for our aviation industry. It’s overdue,” Carolyn McCall, chief executive of easyJet, told journalist­s.

The executives of Air France-KLM, easyJet, Internatio­nal Airlines Group, which oversees British Airways, Lufthansa and Ryanair, said they would form a new associatio­n aimed at representi­ng their interests at the EU level by October, to take their concerns to EU Transport Commission­er Violeta Bulc.

Cutting airport costs, making airspace more efficient – including avoiding labour strikes such as those by air traffic controller­s that have grounded hundreds of passengers – and reducing passenger taxes were among the executives’ key demands.

“It is really unacceptab­le that any of us operate in an airport with a single ground handler,” McCall said.

“It’s very bad for customers, it’s very bad for competitio­n. The EU has to take that onboard because it is there to protect consumers and increase competitio­n.”

Carsten Spohr, an executive with German carrier Lufthansa, and Air France-KLM executive Alexandre de Juniac said one of the priorities was lowering the costs of airport security. Ryanair chief Michael O’Leary called for limiting labour strikes, including encouragin­g arbitratio­n.

“The market should be allowed to operate, said Internatio­nal Airlines Group executive Willie Walsh. It is in the interest of our customers that we have a more efficient industry,” said Internatio­nal Airlines Group executive Willie Walsh. – dpa

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