Airlines brace for climate strings attached to coronavirus bailouts

Airlines bludgeoned by the coronavirus crisis are seeking urgent assistance to stave off bankruptcy, but that doesn’t mean they’re going to get an easy ride on efforts to slash emissions.

With the sector at its most desperate for taxpayer cash, now could even be a pretty good time to twist arms.

Rather than offering some carbon leeway to aviation companies at perhaps their lowest point in the history of commercial flying (and there’s only a fewer percent lower you can go than, as in Italy, an 80 percent drop in ticket sales), Brussels is eyeing a global-warming quid pro quo as the sector seeks unprecedented financial support.

“In line with the increased ambition proposed under the European Green Deal, all sectors, including aviation, are expected to contribute to the EU’s 2030 economy-wide target,” a European Commission official told POLITICO.

Officials stress that a key plank of Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s priorities for her term was to make airlines pay their fair share for the industry’s substantial and growing contribution to greenhouse gas emissions — and this remains the case even in the face of the COVID-19 crisis.

Exiting the crisis “means doubling down on our growth strategy by investing in the European Green Deal. As the global recovery picks up, global warming will not slow down,” von der Leyen told the European Parliament on Thursday.

That includes staying the course with plans for a possible elimination of free allowances within the bloc’s Emissions Trading System, and discussions on a possible EU-wide tax on jet fuel.

Airlines aren’t pleased.

“We definitely don’t need new taxes right now,” Jennifer Janzen, a spokeswoman for the industry trade group Airlines4Europe, told an industry conference in Brussels in March. “Environmental taxes are just going to make this bad situation even worse.”

But they’re not in much of a position to argue.

A report from the Center for Aviation, a Sydney-based industry consultancy, has projected that, without assistance and with cash reserves dwindling, most of the world’s airlines would be bankrupt by May.

To prevent this, Sweden and Denmark have offered credit guarantees to pan-Scandinavian flier SAS. Finnair has won support from Helsinki, and Air France-KLM has approached Paris and The Hague with requests. Alitalia, Germany’s Condor and Brussels Airlines are all tipped for nationalization.

Brussels has conceded a relaxation of EU state aid rules because of the extreme circumstances, with France the first to win approval.

But in response to these developments, former EU Climate Commissioner Miguel Arias Cañete said in an interview with the Guardian that any state aid directed toward aviation “must be conditional, otherwise when we recover we will see the same or higher levels of carbon dioxide.”

Cost calculation

In more bad news for airlines, the Commission is also plowing on with fresh efforts to speed up the difficult and expensive switch to electrification and clean alternative fuels such as synthetic hydrocarbons.

The widescale reduction in flying advocated by climate campaigners, including teenaged Swedish activist Greta Thunberg, could lower emissions. But carbon-neutral electro-fuels could eliminate them altogether, so the Commission is pressing ahead with its pitch to accelerate adoption of these and other options. It will launch a public consultation on policy to push clean aviation fuels in June, a Commission official said.

Key will be ensuring carbon neutrality once the full life-cycle of production and distribution is accounted for. Brussels is keen not to be embarrassed once again by the poor emissions intensity of once-promising alternative fuels as it was a decade ago, when researchers belatedly realized many first-generation biofuels were overall worse for the environment than some fossil fuels — but only after EU incentives for them were introduced.

However, with aviation accounting for 3 percent of global emissions, the climate payoff could be substantial. In 2019, Irish low-cost carrier Ryanair became the seventh-largest carbon emitter in the EU (all the others in the top 10 are coal plants), according to Commission data, even though the short-haul flights that the firm specializes in are more amenable to electrification or electric-hybrid engines, which simply do not work for long-haul because the batteries would be too massive.

Clean aviation campaigners argue many European governments have been in favor of the technology-switching required to fully decarbonize aviation, and have identified some of the innovations that can make it work. It is airlines which have most strongly resisted the move due to the costs involved.

Now, lawmakers see an opportunity to shift the calculations.

If airlines ask for bailouts they should commit to an “ecological transformation contract,” Pascal Canfin, the French MEP in charge of the European Parliament’s environment committee, tweeted on Thursday, adding: “Public money should not only be used to rescue but also to transform.”

The industry receives free ETS allowances covering just under half its emissions. In November, finance ministers from nine countries led by the Netherlands called for this to end, a demand reiterated in early March by environment ministers, led by Poland and joined by a further nine member countries — just before the coronavirus had firmly established itself in Europe.

Despite the radical change in the financial situation of airlines, none among the “clean aviation coalition” of EU countries has backed away from their position.

And while von der Leyen has up to now only mentioned a reduction to this ETS giveaway, an official said: “The Commission is considering all options regarding the increase of auctioning,” potentially including complete abolition of this free ride.

The Commission underlines any change to the allocation of emissions allowances is not going to happen this year. At the end of February, airlines continued to receive their free allocations for 2020, with compliance to be assessed next year.

Trade off

A similar coalition of countries backs a Europe-wide lifting of jet fuel’s global exemption from taxation — a dispensation that dates back to the 1940s and was intended to encourage the takeoff of a nascent industry.

France introduced an eco-tax on flights this year with revenues to be spent boosting local train services, despite Air France-KLM asking for a delay — although it has since paused in implementing the levy. The Dutch government voted at the end of March to move ahead with a flight tax, although Junior Finance Minister Hans Vijlbrief did note in a letter to MPs that “the corona crisis also has serious consequences for the aviation sector” and that the date of the tax could be delayed.

France and the Netherlands also want an EU-wide approach. While changing the bloc’s tax rules requires unanimous agreement among EU ministers, the Commission suggests that requirement could be avoided if the subject is considered as an environmental topic instead of a tax one. It launched its consultation on energy taxation last month, testing the waters of a pan-European jet fuel tax.

Even some aviation sector executives recognize a climate trade-off may be inevitable in return for billions in bridge loans, bailouts and nationalizations.

The CEO of Brussels Airport, Arnaud Feist, said at the end of March: “I don’t think it’s abnormal if conditions are attached to government support. And the climate is a major challenge for aviation.”

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