EU tvrdi da njena pravila ne primoravaju aviokompanije na letove "duhova".

EU tvrdi da njena pravila ne primoravaju aviokompanije na letove "duhova".
EU tvrdi da njena pravila ne primoravaju aviokompanije na letove "duhova".
Napisao Harry Johnson

European Union washes its hands of ‘use it or lose it’ airport slot regulation, claiming that airlines are under no obligation to follow it.

A senior spokesman for the European Commission, Stefan De Keersmaecker, issued a statement, claiming that Evropska unija (EU) rules do not obligate airlines to fly or to keep empty planes in the air, and that making empty or near-empty trips is an individual commercial decision for each carrier to make.

“Deciding to operate routes or not is a commercial decision by the airline company and not a result of EU rules,” the official wrote on Twitter.

“In addition to the lower slot use rates, companies may also request a ‘justified non-use exception’ – to not use a slot – if the route cannot be operated because of sanitary measures, e.g. when new variants emerge during the pandemic,” Keersmaecker added.

The official cited data and forecasts from Eurocontrol, which reported that initial traffic from 2022 was at 77% of pre-pandemic rates.

The Evropska unija authorities are currently urging airlines to stop operating empty flights as they are ‘economically inefficient and bad for the environment.’

Last week, Europe’s second-biggest carrier Lufthanza confirmed that 18,000 flights had been flown empty due to intense regulatory pressure and despite the economic and environmental consequences. Nearly 3,000 of those journeys were operated by the carrier’s subsidiary, Brisel Airlines.

Under the ‘use it or lose it’ regulations, European airlines are normally forced to operate flights in at least 80% of their scheduled takeoff and landing slots in order to retain the right to use those slots.

Pravilo je suspendovano od strane EU at the height of the coronavirus pandemic but reintroduced at the level of 50% last spring. However, in December, the EC said the current 50% threshold would be raised to 64% for this year’s April-to-November summer flight season.

Back then, the Belgian federal government referred the matter to the EC, urging it to rethink the rules on securing slots.

ŠTA UZIMATI IZ OVOG ČLANKA:

  • A senior spokesman for the European Commission, Stefan De Keersmaecker, issued a statement, claiming that European Union (EU) rules do not obligate airlines to fly or to keep empty planes in the air, and that making empty or near-empty trips is an individual commercial decision for each carrier to make.
  • Under the ‘use it or lose it' regulations, European airlines are normally forced to operate flights in at least 80% of their scheduled takeoff and landing slots in order to retain the right to use those slots.
  • The rule was suspended by the EU at the height of the coronavirus pandemic but reintroduced at the level of 50% last spring.

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O autoru

Harry Johnson

Harry Johnson je bio urednik zadatka eTurboNews za mroe od 20 godina. Živi u Honoluluu na Havajima, a porijeklom je iz Evrope. Uživa u pisanju i pokrivanju vijesti.

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