The aviation regulator has moved to stop Heathrow airport from hiking its passenger charges as much as it wanted, but customers of Britain’s busiest airport are set to see the cost of travel increase.

In a bid to recover from the heavy blow it was dealt by Covid-19 travel restrictions over the last 18 months, Heathrow wanted to increase the amount it charges each customer from a cap of £22 in 2020 to between £32 and £43.

But the Civil Aviation Authority confirmed on Tuesday that the airport may only increase its per-customer charge to between £24.50 and £34.40.

Heathrow and the broader airline industry face a tough path to recovery from the damage caused by the pandemic

Heathrow and the broader airline industry face a tough path to recovery from the damage caused by the pandemic

Heathrow and the broader airline industry face a tough path to recovery from the damage caused by the pandemic 

The watchdog said it wanted to balance ‘affordable charges for consumers’ with allowing the airport to continue to invest in service quality, while also ‘supporting consumer demand as the industry recovers’.

Heathrow’s charge cap demands come in the context of its airline customers’ reluctance to raise ticket prices to cover higher airport charges just when they are trying to stimulate passenger demand for their own recovery.

The CAA proposals, which will be finalised next year, include a five-year ‘control period’, allowing the airport to ‘smooth charges for consumers and provide investors with medium-term certainty’.

Heathrow will also see no adjustment to its regulatory asset base, which is designed to provide assurance to investors, ‘to account for losses caused by the pandemic’.

The CAA is also proposing the introduction of a new traffic risk sharing mechanism, designed to prevent either the airport or consumers ‘bearing all the risk of the uncertainty as a result of the industry’s ongoing recovery’.

In addition, it has proposed an interim price cap for 2022 to protect consumers from any undue increase in airport charges while the full proposals are finalised.

Chief executive of the CAA Richard Moriarty ‘While international air travel is still recovering, setting a price control for Heathrow Airport against the backdrop of so much uncertainty means we have had to adapt our approach.

‘Our principal objective is to further the interests of consumers while recognising the challenges the industry has faced throughout the Covid-19 pandemic.

‘These initial proposals seek to protect consumers against unfair charges, and will allow Heathrow to continue to appropriately invest in keeping the airport resilient, efficient and one that provides a good experience for passengers.’

#fiveDealsWidget .dealItemTitle#mobile {display:none} #fiveDealsWidget {display:block; float:left; clear:both; max-width:636px; margin:0; padding:0; line-height:120%; font-size:12px} #fiveDealsWidget div, #fiveDealsWidget a {margin:0; padding:0; line-height:120%; text-decoration: none; font-family:Arial, Helvetica ,sans-serif} #fiveDealsWidget .widgetTitleBox {display:block; float:left; width:100%; background-color:#af1e1e; } #fiveDealsWidget .widgetTitle {color:#fff; text-transform: uppercase; font-size:18px; font-weight:bold; margin:6px 10px 4px 10px; } #fiveDealsWidget a.dealItem {float:left; display:block; width:124px; margin-right:4px; margin-top:5px; background-color: #e3e3e3; min-height:200px;} #fiveDealsWidget a.dealItem#last {margin-right:0} #fiveDealsWidget .dealItemTitle {display:block; margin:10px 5px; color:#000; font-weight:bold} #fiveDealsWidget .dealItemImage, #fiveDealsWidget .dealItemImage img {float:left; display:block; margin:0; padding:0} #fiveDealsWidget .dealItemImage {border:1px solid #ccc} #fiveDealsWidget .dealItemImage img {width:100%; height:auto} #fiveDealsWidget .dealItemdesc {float:left; display:block; color:#004db3; font-weight:bold; margin:5px;} #fiveDealsWidget .dealItemRate {float:left; display:block; color:#000; margin:5px} #fiveDealsWidget .footerText a:hover{text-decoration: underline;} #fiveDealsWidget .footerSmall{font-size:10px; padding-top:10px;} @media (max-width: 635px) { #fiveDealsWidget a.dealItem {width:19%; margin-right:1%} #fiveDealsWidget a.dealItem#last {width:20%} } @media (max-width: 560px) { #fiveDealsWidget #desktop {display:none;} #fiveDealsWidget #mobile {display:block!important} #fiveDealsWidget a.dealItem {background-color: #fff; height:auto; min-height:auto} #fiveDealsWidget a.dealItem {border-bottom:1px solid #ececec; margin-bottom:5px; padding-bottom:10px} #fiveDealsWidget a.dealItem#last {border-bottom:0px solid #ececec; margin-bottom:5px; padding-bottom:0px} #fiveDealsWidget a.dealItem, #fiveDealsWidget a.dealItem#last {width:100%} #fiveDealsWidget .dealItemContent, #fiveDealsWidget .dealItemImage {float:left; display:inline-block} #fiveDealsWidget .dealItemImage {width:35%; margin-right:1%} #fiveDealsWidget .dealItemContent {width:63%} #fiveDealsWidget .dealItemTitle {margin: 0px 5px 5px; font-size:16px} #fiveDealsWidget .dealItemContent .dealItemdesc, #fiveDealsWidget .dealItemContent .dealItemRate {clear:both} }

This post first appeared on Dailymail.co.uk

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Budget 2021: Chancellor Rishi Sunak WILL extend furlough scheme until end of September in boost for workers

THE furlough scheme will today be extended until the end of September.…

Inside the factory of bakery giant set to take on Greggs as it slashes prices and announces store openings

A BAKERY giant is set to take the UK by storm –…

What next for mortgage rates? Two-year fix drops slightly but borrowers still face remortgage shock

Mortgage rates are rising amid a fresh wave of UK economic uncertainty. …

Boots confirms another store to close in weeks before 300 shops disappear from high streets for good

ANOTHER Boots store is set to close next month as the health…