UK Regulator Civil Aviation Authority Confirmed Heathrow Airport Airline Charge Cap , Airport Not Very Happy.

UK  Regulator  Civil Aviation Authority  confirmed  Heathrow  Airport  airline  charge cap ,  Airport Not Very happy.

UK Regulator Civil Aviation Authority confirmed Heathrow Airport airline charge cap , Airport Not Very happy.

  • The UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) has confirmed the final level of price cap on what Heathrow Airport can charge its airline customers.
  • The new cap, which will be affective until the end of 2026, will see the average maximum price per passenger drop 20% to £25.43 in 2024 from £31.57 in 2023.
  • The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) said Britain's hub airport could charge an average maximum price per passenger of £27.49 over the 2022-2026 period.
 

The UK Civil Aviation Authority has published the Final Decision for the annual caps that will apply to the charges that Heathrow Airport Limited levies on airlines for using the airport until the end of 2026.

 

But, Heathrow Airport says it is "considering its next steps" after the industry regulator ruled it must cut per passenger fees it charges airlines from next year.

 

The regulator has confirmed that charges for 2023 will remain fixed at the level set out in its interim decision issued earlier this year. The average maximum price per passenger will then fall by about 20% from £31.57* per passenger in 2023 to £25.43** per passenger in 2024 and will remain broadly flat at that level until the end of 2026.

 

This means the average charge over the five years will be £27.49 compared to £28.39 for Final Proposals, a reduction of £0.90 (all in nominal prices).

 

This lower level of charges from 2024 recognises that passenger volumes are expected to return to pre-pandemic levels and should benefit passengers in terms of lower costs, while also allowing Heathrow Airport Limited to continue investing in the airport for the benefit of consumers and supporting the airport’s ability to finance its operations.

 
 

The package includes a £3.6 billion capital investment programme. Passengers will benefit from investments such as next generation security scanners and a new baggage system in Terminal 2, which are collectively expected to cost around £1.3 billion and should bring considerable passenger benefits, including an improved security experience and more resilient infrastructure. 

 

The arrangements also incentivise Heathrow to provide a good quality service for passengers and include a suite of measures, targets, and incentives to capture the main aspects of airport operation services that are important to consumers. This includes retaining some current measures such as time waiting in security queues, but also now includes new measures such as helpfulness/attitude of security staff, wi-fi performance, availability of check-in infrastructure, as well as hygiene safety testing and more.

 

The Civil Aviation Authority’s updated analysis reflects a passenger forecast that has been revised upwards since Final Proposals were first published in June 2022, as recovery from the pandemic continues. The decision also reflects changes in the wider macro-economic environment, in particular updated forecasts of inflation and interest rates since the Final Proposals were published.

 

Richard Moriarty, Chief Executive at the UK Civil Aviation Authoritysaid:

“Our priority in making this decision today is to ensure the travelling public can expect great value for money from using Heathrow in terms of having a consistently good quality of service, whilst paying no more than is needed for it.

“We have carefully considered the sharply differing views from Heathrow Airport Limited and the airlines about the future level of charges. Understandably, their respective shareholder interests lead the airport to argue for higher charges and the airlines to argue for lower charges. 

“Our job is to reach an independent decision from these conflicting commercial interests and focus on what is in the best interests for the travelling public that will use Heathrow in the years to come. In doing so we have taken all the points made by Heathrow Airport Limited and airlines into account, along with extensive consultation and our own detailed analysis. 

“We are confident our final decision represents a good deal for consumers using Heathrow, while having regard for the airport’s need to efficiently finance its operations and be able to invest in improving services for the future”.

 

While Airlines are happy about the decision , Heathrow believes , 

"The CAA has chosen to cut airport charges to their lowest real terms level in a decade at a time when airlines are making massive profits and Heathrow remains loss-making because of fewer passengers and higher financing costs. 

"This makes no sense and will do nothing for consumers at a time when the CAA should be incentivising investment to rebuild service. We will now take some time to carefully consider our next steps."

 

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