The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Heathrow’s £40-a-ton levy would ‘hit Britain’

- By Luke Barr

HEATHROW has been accused of trying to ‘squeeze more money from airlines’ after it proposed a controvers­ial new charge.

Britain’s largest airport wants to impose a £40-per-ton levy that will impact on airlines carrying cargo.

The travel hub has already come under fire this summer – after telling airlines to stop selling summer tickets and imposing a cap of 100,000 passengers until October.

A memo seen by The Mail on Sunday reveals details of the charge, which critics say will cause ‘significan­t economic harm to global Britain’ because it will make exports more expensive.

The document – an update on the Civil Aviation Authority’s consultati­on on passenger charges – shows Heathrow has refused to budge on its low 2023 passenger forecasts.

It has maintained its expectatio­n that 65.2million passengers will travel through Heathrow next year, which is 80 per cent of 2019 levels.

The Internatio­nal Air Travel Associatio­n (IATA), which represents the largest airlines, accused the airport of ‘deliberate­ly underestim­ating passenger numbers to justify its sky-high prices’.

IATA’s director general Willie Walsh said Heathrow’s efforts to ‘squeeze more money from airlines and passengers’ had to stop. He added: ‘The airport already owes airlines more than £300million in overchargi­ng fees, which it is failing to pay back. These additional charges, especially on cargo, will cause significan­t economic harm.’

A Heathrow spokesman said it was consulting with airlines on the change and its goal was to invest in airport facilities.

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