Business | Aviation
Nations outline options to fight EU airline carbon emission rule
Countries can bar carrier participation or impose retaliatory levies
- Image Credit: AP
- From left: Matthew Baldwin, director of aviation and international transport affairs for the European Commission; Boubacar Djibo, director of the Air Transport Bureau of the ICAO, and moderator Paul Steele, executive director of the Air Transport Action Group, at a panel discussion on “ETS and Beyond” at the Singapore Airshow Aviation Leadership Summit.
Moscow Countries opposed to an EU law forcing the world's airlines to pay for carbon emissions have agreed on a basket of retaliatory measures but will leave it up to each country to choose among them, Russia's deputy transport minister said yesterday.
Each country has the options of barring its airlines from participating in the European Union's carbon scheme, lodging a formal complaint with the UN's International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO), ceasing talks with European carriers on new routes and imposing retaliatory levies on EU airlines.
"Every state will choose the most effective and reliable measures that will help to cancel or postpone the implementation of the EU ETS (Emissions Trading System)," Valery Okulov, whose ministry hosted the meeting of 26 nations, told a news conference.
Since the start of this year, all airlines using EU airports are required to buy permits under the ETS, which has prompted international outrage and threats of a trade war. Russia hosted a two-day meeting of countries opposed to the EU scheme, which ended yesterday.
Compromise solution
Some countries including Russia had suggested the conflict could be deferred to the ICAO for a global compromise solution agreed with the European Union.
But the Russians appeared to have hardened their stance in comments this week. "We have demonstrated our determination to ask for a cancellation or postponement of the EU ETS" in regard to airlines, Okulov said.
On Tuesday, Russian Transport Minister Igor Levitin told national transportation officials and representatives from ICAO and the International Air Traffic Association assembled in Moscow that Russia would consider a ban on ETS participation.
China's central government State Council, or cabinet, earlier this month said all airlines were barred from taking part — unless they received government approval to do so.
Okulov said Saudi Arabia would organise the next meeting of the so-called "coalition of the unwilling" in the summer.
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