Business | Aviation
British Airways and Virgin will pay $204m to settle US claims
British Airways and Virgin Atlantic have agreed to pay passengers around $204 million to settle US claims they conspired to fix fuel surcharges on transatlantic routes, the Financial Times said.
London: British Airways and Virgin Atlantic have agreed to pay passengers around $204 million to settle US claims they conspired to fix fuel surcharges on transatlantic routes, the Financial Times said.
The newspaper said it was claimed the airlines colluded to improperly inflate their fuel charges on international flights between August 2004 and January 2006. During that period surcharges rose from £5 ($9.85) to £60 for a typical BA or Virgin long-haul return flight, the FT said on Friday.
Amount
The Times newspaper said that BA will pay $140 million in compensation after a provisional settlement was reached last night, with an announcement expected soon.
The Financial Times added that the settlement brings BA's total payout to for conspiring to fix fuel surcharges to £338 million - £12 million short of the total set aside for such penalties.
BA chief executive officer Willie Walsh had said last August that its provision of £350 million was sufficient to cover all fines related to its fuel-surcharge price fixing.
More from Aviation
More from Business
Business Editor's choice
-
‘Wrong Way' Krugman
The source of our economic malfunction lies with government-mandated bank regulations
-
Greek exit could make Eurozone stronger
Departure will show limits of bailouts and allow remaining members to act much more like a unit
-
UAE upholds values of free trade
Recently released statistics confirm an established fact, namely that of the UAE embracing the free trade principle in general and imports in particular

