Move Over Russia And China, India Wants A Seat On The Anti-ETS Train……

Barely 24 hours since I wrote how Russia has joined China and in their respective ways have begun to boycott the EU and their Emission Trading Scheme, India has now come forward and asked their national carriers to follow suit and boycott the payment of any Trading Scheme taxes. They have gone as far as to ask their carriers to not provide any of the data that the EU is asking for in terms of their emissions. Apparently if the EU does have your emissions data they have no basis upon which to tax an airline.

Based on the comments in the article from Reuters that I’ve attached, the EU is standing by their scheme (the word scheme just sounds underhanded does it?) unless the UN’s International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) can work out a better solution. Judging by the success (or lack thereof) of the UN in endeavors such as the “Kyoto Protocol” I’m not going to hold my breath waiting for a solution to which everyone will subscribe. My personal hypothesis on this is that the EU will over time quietly shelve this attempt at extortion and fund raising.

This was reported earlier today on Reuters and I’ve cut and pasted the article below:

(Reuters) – India joined China in asking its airlines to boycott the European Union’s carbon scheme on Thursday, confirming what a senior Indian government source previously told Reuters and stoking a diplomatic row over the issue.

“Though the European Union has directed Indian carriers to submit emissions details of their aircraft by March 31, 2012, no Indian carrier is submitting them in view of the position of the government,” India’s civil aviation minister Ajit Singh said on Thursday.

“Hence the imposition of a carbon tax does not arise,” Singh told lawmakers in a written reply.

The European Commission was not immediately available to comment.

India’s opposition to the Emission Trading Scheme ETS.L, a major plank in the bloc’s efforts to curb carbon dioxide emissions and combat global warming, could damage the chances of the Free Trade Agreement FTA.L it is negotiating with the EU.

On Monday, a senior government official told Reuters that India would ask local airlines not to buy carbon credits from or share emissions data with the bloc.

Since January this year, all airlines using EU airports start to become liable to pay for carbon emissions, but no carriers will be handed a bill until next year.

Initially, they will also be given free allowances to cover the bulk of the cost.

The March 31 deadline is one of a series for airlines to comply with various EU requirements. Documents seen by Reuters showed that airlines, including from India and China, have previously signed up to become eligible for free allowances.

SOVEREIGNTY

Foreign governments, including the world’s top three carbon emitters – the United States, China and India – say the EU is exceeding its legal jurisdiction by charging for an entire flight, as opposed to just the part covering European airspace.

In a meeting last month in Moscow of the so-called “coalition of the unwilling”, countries opposed to the EU law including India, agreed on retaliatory steps, although it did not agree on enforcing them.

China said in February its airlines were barred from participating in the EU Emissions Trading Scheme unless they gained government approval. Beijing has also suspended the purchase of $14 billion worth of jets from European maker Airbus (EAD.PA).

The EU’s Climate Commissioner Connie Hedegaard has said the EU only adopted its current policy because efforts to agree a United Nations scheme to curb rising aviation emissions had failed.

She has repeatedly said the EU will stand by its law unless the United Nations’ International Civil Aviation Organization can come up with a global plan.

The European Parliament has also reiterated support for the carbon charge and officials say it could decide to express its anger at India by blocking the Free Trade Agreement with the country.

Already, differences over duties on cars and market access for software and services have threatened the trade deal.

“It would probably be extremely difficult, if not impossible, to get the FTA through the (European) parliament if India does this (ignores the EU’s ETS aviation law) and India is in the last stage of this negotiation,” said Glyn Ford, a former European lawmaker who now works at Brussels-based consultancy GPlus.

Carbon prices on the EU’s ETS have fallen to levels far below those needed to encourage low-carbon investment.

On Thursday EU carbon permits dropped nearly 9 percent to an intra-day low of 6.70 euros before recovering slightly to close at 6.93 euros.

Traders said part of the reason for the fall was the possibility of weakening demand for permits following India’s statement on the ETS.

(Additional reporting by Barbara Lewis in Brussels and Nina Chestney in London; Editing by John Chalmers, David Holmes, Anthony Barker)

Spiegel-Online Article On Miles & More Changes – IN GERMAN

Today on the Spiegel.de website, there was a write up about the upcoming changes to Lufthansa’s Miles&More program that has some members upset.

I’m traveling at the moment and do not have time to properly translate this article, however you can use Google’s Translate function to help you convert to English. Sorry for the inconvenience, but it is a good article to read.

Click Here For The Article

Lufthansa Denied A380 Flights To Shanghai : First Emission Tax Scheme Casualty

A million thanks to Frequently Flying for retweeting this breaking news!!!

In tomorrow’s news from Air Transport World, it seems the first casualty has been suffered on the battlefield. China has denied Lufthansa landing rights for it’s A380 service to Shanghai. Lufthansa’s CEO Christoph Franz shared his perspectives and disappointment when he addressed the European Aviation Club in Brussels. You can read his comments throughout the article that I attached below.

This is the first real volley in what had been mostly a war of words until now. China has threatened all along not to abide by the EU’s scheme to tax airlines who exceed pollution quotas. Previously they had balked on aircraft orders from Airbus, but now they are getting a bit more personal with a direct strike on Lufthansa. Look for LH not to take this sitting down.

To get caught up on what’s been happening with this on going debate, you can read my recent post about it here where I talk about how this tax scheme can actually ruin an industry.

Here is the Air Transport World Article:

China’s opposition to the European Union’s Emission Trading Scheme (EU ETS), has prevented Lufthansa (LH) from obtaining rights to operate an Airbus A380 to Shanghai, LH chairman and CEO Christoph Franz said.

“The EU ETS is further increasing the already distorted level playing. We [the European airline industry] cannot accept retaliatory measures against the EU ETS in whatever form, landing rights or other. Some days ago, Lufthansa once again did not get the authorization to use an A380 to Shanghai,” Franz told the European Aviation Club in Brussels Tuesday.

“Listening and nodding is not enough,” he warned European regulators. “We are in favor of a global solution [under ICAO]; however, in the meantime there is distortion. This distortion has started for Lufthansa in the second half of 2011 when we started hedging and buying CO2 certificates. We are trapped in a corner,” he said.

LH has said it will have to buy at least 35% of the ETS certificates it needs this year and has estimated the ETS cost on group level this year at €130 million ($171.4 million). It decided to pass on this cost to the passenger and include it in the fuel surcharge.

Franz slammed regulators for not addressing other market distortions and for not creating the right regulatory framework for European network airlines to thrive. “There are some indications that [European Commission’s] DG Competition will analyze subsidies to low cost carriers. It is a scandal that Ryanair receives €18 support per passenger at Charleroi airport (CRL) while Brussels Airlines [in which LH holds 45%] has to pay €26 in passenger duties and taxes at Brussels airport, which is just 45 km away [from CRL].”

He also criticized the inability of European and national authorities to deal with the massive influx of capacity by airlines from the Arabian Gulf states. LH offers some 7,000 weekly seats from Germany, which has 82 million inhabitants, to the Gulf states, whereas the airlines from the Gulf states, which have 6 to 7 million inhabitants, offer 38,000 seats to Germany, Franz said. “This is real distorted market access, today. This is not a forecasted situation for tomorrow. This has to be addressed through bilateral agreements because air transport is not part of the WTO and thus the normal instruments of addressing such market distortions are not there.”