Britain’s Fallon warns of clear and present danger
Berlin: Aerospace officials of the European countries where Airbus makes its planes will push for a suspension of the European Union’s Emission Trading System (ETS) for airlines to avert retaliation from China, officials said on Tuesday.
Berlin: Aerospace officials of the European countries where Airbus makes its planes will push for a suspension of the European Union’s Emission Trading System (ETS) for airlines to avert retaliation from China, officials said on Tuesday.
“Airbus has left us with no
doubt that the threat of retaliatory action is a clear and present
danger to its order list,” Michael Fallon, new business minister in
Britain, said at the ILA Berlin Air Show on Tuesday.
There is harsh opposition to
the ETS from European air travel companies and countries outside the EU
such as the United States, Australia and Brazil that have said they want
a global agreement to curb carbon emissions rather than a European law
that extends to non-EU companies.
China has threatened
retaliation — including impounding European aircraft — if the European
Union punishes Chinese airlines for not complying with its emissions
trading scheme (ETS), intended to curb pollution.
The dispute between China and
the EU froze deals worth up to $14 billion (Dh51.4 billion), though
China signed an agreement with Germany for 50 Airbus planes worth over
$4 billion during Chancellor Angela Merkel’s visit to Beijing last
month.
If the dispute is not
resolved, Airbus will have to cut its production target for the A330
“pretty soon”, Airbus chief executive Fabrice Bregier said late on
Monday.
“We are very
much aware that the clock is ticking. We have very little time left,”
Fallon said, referring to airlines’ first EU deadline in April 2013 to
pay for their emissions.
He was speaking at a joint
news conference of the four government officials from Britain, Germany,
Spain and France — the so-called Airbus ministers — who usually meet at
air shows to discuss matters related to Airbus.
Chris Davies, the Liberal
Democrat environment spokesman in the European Parliament, described the
UK minister’s remarks as “a stab in the back” for EU negotiators.
“Europe’s negotiating
strength depends on our unity and our determination. Nothing will be
achieved by showing weakness in the way this poorly informed junior
minister would like,” he told Reuters.
Discrimination
The airline industry has said
the ETS distorts competition, forcing European carriers to pay more
simply because of the fact they are based in the EU.
“We feel we are being
discriminated against,” Germany’s aerospace policy coordinator Peter
Hintze said. “We demand a global solution from an industrial policy
point of view because we could otherwise put ourselves at a disadvantage
in major markets.”
Hintze, Fallon and their
French and Spanish counterparts will urge their national governments to
push for a suspension of the EU’s ETS until the next general meeting of
global trade body ICAO — the United Nations’ International Civil
Aviation Organisation — in September 2013.
Hintze said no decision had been made yet on what a global agreement on emissions trading could look like.
“The goal must be that the contribution of aviation is not just limited to one continent but is agreed worldwide,” he said.
Airbus sales chief John Leahy
suggested at a separate news conference on Tuesday that one possible
solution could be that all airlines around the world pay a tax to ICAO
for carbon emissions, regardless of where they are based.
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