Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2000-05-03-Speech-3-103"

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"en.20000503.6.3-103"2
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"Mr President, the report we are discussing today deals with the results of the liberalisation of the air transport sector in the European Union, which was concluded in 1993. We have supported this liberalisation process so that bilateral barriers may be lifted, ownership restrictions changed, technical standards harmonised, and suitable safety standards established and so that the conditions of liberalisation may promote greater transparency with regard to how air transport development policy is framed and allow, above all, the inclusion of environmental considerations in production within the aeronautical industry, in tariff policy and in the management of air traffic. A key point raised by the rapporteur is the current situation in which, while the aviation industry is liberalised and operates in an open European market, the authorities which control the air space, the airports and the regulating bodies, as well as the companies providing services to the air transport sector, still operate from an excessively local point of view. The rapporteur also mentions, as an unresolved issue, the continued state presence, in certain cases, in the ownership of national airlines. Turning in particular to air traffic control, the development of a common system of air safety is a fine challenge for the future. We must not forget that European airspace is a mosaic made up of 15 sovereign Member States, which, for a variety of reasons, mainly military, find it difficult to relinquish part of their sovereignty in this area. To this end, we must concern ourselves with resolving the issue of the policy of privatising the operational bodies responsible for air traffic control. With regard to charges, we share the Commission’s opinion that the costs over which the airlines have no control – ground assistance charges, airport taxes and atmospheric costs – must be transparent and non-discriminatory. Turning to the Sterckx report, our contribution has concentrated on the environmental aspects related to it. Our main criticism centres on the fact that the Commission, in its overall analysis, is trying to treat environmental, safety and health aspects in the aeronautical sector as a separate debate, by means of a separate communication, when, in reality, the impact of these factors on the future of the industry is crucial. I would finally like to mention some basic points. Airlines’ pricing policy must include the external environmental costs of air transport. The regulation of slot allocation must be reviewed according to specific environmental criteria, taking account of noise and emissions into the atmosphere, and specific actions should be taken in order to strengthen intermodality with other trans-European networks, especially with railways, in light of the conclusions of the report on aviation and the global environment, which considers that more than 10% of European short-haul air traffic could change from air to rail."@en1

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