European Airport Slot Rules Will Benefit Non-EU Economies Claims Study

An authoritative independent study carried out for the European Regions Airline Association (ERA) and the European Business Aviation Association by internationally renowned consultants Mott MacDonald claims that the European Commission’s (EC) proposed amendments to slot allocation regulation in the EU are based on “incomplete and inaccurate analyses”.

The study says that any gains from changes in slot allocation rules are “likely to benefit non-EU economies,” would lead to job losses throughout Europe and be “detrimental to Europe’s air service connectivity,” its economic and social well-being; particularly within the peripheral often disadvantaged regions of Europe.

The study identifies significant weaknesses in the impact assessment undertaken for the European Commission (on which its proposals are based) which include key areas that it claims are inadequately analysed or include miscalculated or inaccurate economic and social benefit data. For example, the EC’s impact assessment acknowledges that regional air services would be adversely affected by the new slot proposals but fails to assess their impact on regional airports and economies in Europe’s peripheral areas. The study concludes that the EC’s proposals “would lead to job losses in peripheral areas” which would exceed any job gains at Europe’s core airports.

The European Commission is constrained in direct action that it can take to increase capacity at individual airports. However, by concentrating solely on amendments to the existing slot allocation regulation, the study says it has “forfeited” an opportunity to create additional airport capacity by facilitating the use of ‘best practices’ at Europe’s congested airports.

Mike Ambrose, Director General, ERA said: “It is not surprising that the superficial and incomplete analyses in the impact assessment undertaken for the Commission have resulted in flawed proposals. The Mott MacDonald study confirms that a more robust analysis would have demonstrated their serious adverse economic and social consequences to the EU peripheral regions.”

“The importance of non-scheduled operations is barely acknowledged by the EC's proposal,” added Fabio Gamba, CEO, European Business Aviation Association. “The reality is that our historical rights and investments at primary and secondary airports have been totally disregarded. In consequence, our gradual marginalisation will have a negative impact on businesses and local communities during a time of great social and economic uncertainty. Solving the capacity crunch cannot be done to the detriment of a crucial part of the economy; it must incorporate it.”

ERA and EBAA are calling for the European Parliament and Council to reconsider some of the fundamental proposals made by the Commission and are working to expose the failings to the regional and national representatives across Europe to ensure that what they believe to be the negative aspects of the proposed regulatory amendments are removed.