Outrageous infrastructure cost increases to hamper airline recovery says IATA
04 October, 2021
4 min read
Industry News

Geoffrey Thomas
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The International Air Transport Association (IATA) has warned that planned increases in charges by airports and air navigation service providers (ANSPs) will stall recovery in air travel and damage international connectivity.
It says that confirmed airport and ANSP charges increases have already reached US$2.3 billion. Further increases could be tenfold this number if proposals already tabled by airports and ANSPs are granted.
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IATA’s Director-General Willie Walsh said that “a $2.3 billion charges increase during this crisis are outrageous. We all want to put COVID-19 behind us. But placing the financial burden of a crisis of apocalyptic proportions on the backs of your customers, just because you can, is a commercial strategy that only a monopoly could dream up.
"At an absolute minimum, cost reduction—not charges increases—must be top of the agenda for every airport and ANSP. It is for their customer airlines,” said Mr. Walsh.
IATA said that a case in point is found among European air navigation service providers. Collectively, ANSPs of the 29 Eurocontrol states, the majority of which are state-owned, are looking to recoup almost $9.3 billion (€8 billion) from airlines to cover revenues not realized in 2020/2021. They want to do this to recover the revenue and profits they missed when airlines were unable to fly during the pandemic. Moreover, they want to do this in addition to a 40 percent increase planned for 2022 alone.
Other examples cited by IATA include:

- Heathrow Airport pushing to increase charges by over 90 percent in 2022
- Amsterdam Schiphol Airport requesting to increase charges by over 40 percent over the next three years
- Airports Company South Africa (ACSA) asking to increase charges by 38 percent in 2022
- NavCanada increasing charges by 30 percent over five years
- Ethiopian ANSP raising charges by 35 percent in 2021
- Implementing sustainable cost control measures
- Tapping shareholders
- Accessing capital markets
- Seeking government aid
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