European Airlines Push Back Against Environmental Short-Haul Bans
25.08.2023 - 14:19
/ skift.com
/ Willie Walsh
/ Airlines
The airline industry plans to invoke EU rights to freedom of movement to push back against environmental restrictions on short-haul flights, officials in the sector said, following a partial ban in France approved by Brussels in December.
Industry groups fear the ban could set a precedent for wider limitations across Europe on short-haul flying — once a symbol of cross-border liberalisation and now increasingly under fire.
French and European airports and regional airlines are laying out a new strategy to counter the ban on three French short-haul flight routes, which is in place for three years.
While they say a formal legal challenge is unlikely, they plan to invoke freedom of movement — one of four basic freedoms enshrined in European law — in informal reviews of the law expected to take place twice a year, and to lobby the government.
“We have the principle established by the EU of an open, liberalized market with the freedom to provide air services for any European airlines between any point within Europe,” one senior industry official said.
“And that’s basically to support the freedom of movement, people and citizens across Europe.”
The freedom of movement argument wades into one of the most sensitive topics in European politics, but faces considerable hurdles given its complexity, European sources said.
Industry bodies also claim the ban — which impacted far fewer routes than environmental groups had hoped — is ultimately ineffective in significantly curbing emissions.
SCARA, a group representing regional French airlines that lobbied aggressively to water down the original ban, said it would also use review periods to prove that the ban has no real impact.
“We’ll embarrass people with the data,” global airlines head Willie Walsh said on the sidelines of the Airline Economics conference in Dublin.
“If we banned all flights of less than 500 km in Europe … it would be less than 4 percent of the CO2 in Europe, right? I think there’s a perception that it would be 80 percent. It’s not a solution,” he told Reuters.
According to the Union of French Airports, which plans to complain to France’s Council of State about the ban, likely by the end of this month, the routes that will be banned represent only 0.23 percent of France’s air transport emissions, 0.04 percent of transport sector emissions and 0.02 percent of the air transport sector’s emissions.
Green lobbyists want wider restrictions, and are preparing to counter the industry’s efforts to reverse the ban.
Jo Dardenne, aviation director at campaign group Transport and Environment, acknowledged that the ban was limited for now, but said it is an important signal to countries keen to reduce aviation emissions.
“It’s to show that… you have the right