The Star Late Edition

Chinese airlines refuse to pay Europe’s carbon tax

- Alison Leung and Harry Suhartono

CHINA’S airlines will refuse to pay any carbon costs under the EU’S emissions trading scheme (ETS), while other Asia Pacific carriers, already battling a weak travel market, are likely to pass on the extra cost to passengers.

The EU’S ETS initiative was launched in 2005 as one of the major pillars of the bloc’s efforts to combat climate change. From January 1, all airlines using EU airports are included in the cap-and-trade scheme.

“China will not co-operate with the EU on the ETS, so Chinese airlines will not impose surcharges on customers relating to the emissions tax,” China Air Transport Associatio­n (Cata) deputy secretary-general Cai Haibo said yesterday.

Cata represents the country’s four major airlines: flag-carrier Air China, China Southern Airlines, China Eastern Airlines and Hainan Airlines.

A European Commission spokeswoma­n had no immediate comment on any refusal by China’s airlines to pay.

EU law makes a provision to enforce fines of 100 (R1 047) for each ton of carbon dioxide emitted for which airlines have not surrendere­d carbon allowances.

In the event airlines persistent­ly flout the EU law, the commission has the option of banning an aircraft operator.

Immediatel­y after a December ruling from Europe’s highest court that inclusion of airlines in the ETS was valid, China’s state-run Xinhua news agency warned of a trade war, although the foreign ministry later stated its opposition less stridently and called on the EU to talk to other government­s.

The US has also warned of possible retaliatio­n, while a draft law in the US Congress proposes to make it illegal to comply with the EU legislatio­n.

Chinese airlines would consider taking legal action against the EU in response to its charges for carbon emissions on flights, Cai said.

But they would not rush into this, he added, mindful that US airlines in December lost their legal challenge against the ETS and given that collection of the carbon cost from airlines would not be until March 2013.

Australia’s Qantas Airways has said it was also considerin­g legal action against the scheme.

“We are now walking on two legs – first, we would not rule out the chance of taking legal action and, second, to resort to the government for retaliator­y measures. Several department­s have been looking into this.”

Cata estimated the scheme would cost Chinese airlines 800 million yuan (R989m) in the first year and more than triple that by 2020.

The European Commission has assessed the impact on air fares at 2 to 12 a passenger. For airlines the cost is gradual as 85 percent of carbon allowances are handed out for free this year and bills will be due only next year after emissions are calculated.

Germany’s Lufthansa, the world’s second-largest longhaul carrier after Dubai’s Emirates, warned passengers on Monday to brace for higher ticket prices as it decided to pass on costs to the passengers.

The EU said its ETS, which already applies to other industries, was the fairest way to cope with aviation’s contributi­on to global warming in the absence of a global scheme, which more than a decade of debate at the UN’S Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on failed to deliver.

Hong Kong-based Cathay Pacific Airways and some other Asian airlines, facing a sluggish economy and weak cargo demand, said they might impose surcharges or increase airfares to counter the ETS impact.

“It’s inevitable that increased costs will be passed on to passengers. We will share the details at the appropriat­e time,” said Carolyn Leung, a spokeswoma­n for Cathay Pacific, whose chief executive has said the ETS would add about HK$50 (R51.81) to a ticket between Hong Kong and Europe.

Singapore Airlines (SIA), which is the world’s secondmost valuable airline, said it would try to offset the impact of the ETS by improving fuel efficiency and reducing its carbon emissions, which would lower the carbon charges.

“However, we’re not yet ruling out any options for recovering the additional cost,” SIA spokesman Nicholas Ionides said in response to a query.

Tony Tyler, the directorge­neral of the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (Iata), has said the ETS would cost airlines

1.2 billion this year, and he warned that airlines could struggle to pass this on to passengers in a relatively weak travel market.

Iata, whose 230 members carry more than 93 percent of scheduled internatio­nal air traffic, forecast a 29 percent drop in the industry’s profit this year to $4.9bn (R39.4bn), dented by the weak global economy and high fuel prices. – Reuters

 ??  ?? An Air China airplane approaches for landing as other airplanes are parked on the tarmac in Beijing. The representa­tive body of China’s four major carriers says it will not comply with the carbon tax.
An Air China airplane approaches for landing as other airplanes are parked on the tarmac in Beijing. The representa­tive body of China’s four major carriers says it will not comply with the carbon tax.

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