Carbon tax and Europe to dominate airline talks

  • Black 505: Rafizi defies police
    Black 505: Rafizi defies police

    With about 48 hours left before Saturday's Black 505 rally, the standoff between the police and the organisers continues.In response to a police warning yesterday (June 19) that the organisers will be prosecuted if the rally is held, PKR strategy director Rafizi Ramli told The Malaysian Insider there was no change of plan. "We will continue with it," he said of the plan to hold the gathering at Padang Merbok in Kuala Lumpur."However, we are hopeful that closer to the date, the police will be …

  • Union comes up with business plan to save KTMB
    Union comes up with business plan to save KTMB

    The Railwaymen Union of Malaya (RUM) has come up with a business plan which it says can save Malaysia’s largest railway network. …

  • Flash mob to garner Black 505 Saturday rally support
    Flash mob to garner Black 505 Saturday rally support

    Armed with placards and banners, publicising the rally at Padang Merbuk on June 22, the supporters shouted slogans, calling for 'Reformasi' and the dissolution of the Election Commission. …

  • DAP MP petitions to disqualify 2 ministers, 3 deputy ministers
    DAP MP petitions to disqualify 2 ministers, 3 deputy ministers

    The recent appointments of two ministers and three deputy ministers were unconstitutional, DAP MP M. Kula Segaran said in a petition filed at the Kuala Lumpur High court today. …

  • PKR: Deputy IGP should not be an Umno stooge
    PKR: Deputy IGP should not be an Umno stooge

    PKR de facto leader Anwar Ibrahim has warned deputy inspector-general of police Bakri Zinin not to behave like an Umno division leader by curbing Saturday's 'Black 505' rally rally at Padang Merbok in Kuala Lumpur. …

The world's airline bosses meet from Sunday in Beijing, with talks likely to be dominated by a bitterly opposed carbon tax, the European debt crisis and the perennial headache of high oil prices.

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) annual conference is likely to see airlines joining global calls for an alternative to the European Union's Emissions Trading Scheme, industry analyst Barry Grindrod said.

The European bloc has attempted to impose the controversial tax on all airlines, sparking a backlash from the United States, China, Russia and India as well as European carriers fearful of retaliatory sanctions.

Airlines flying to, from or within the European Union are required to monitor CO2 emissions for entire journeys and, if necessary, pay for exceeding their carbon allowances.

"This will be the mood of the IATA meeting, where I expect all carriers to support the global approach," said Grindrod, chief executive of Orient Aviation, a leading industry magazine.

The health of the European economy is also likely to come under scrutiny amid fears of the debt crisis currently gripping the continent, despite figures showing a 5.6 percent on year growth in European passenger traffic in April.

"The European sovereign debt crisis is unresolved and we are seeing signs that it is starting to affect Asia's export-driven economies," said Tony Tyler, director general of IATA.

The ongoing high price of oil, meanwhile, continues to erode carriers' profits, said Tyler, noting that fuel costs now represent roughly 34 percent of companies' expenses compared to only 14 percent when the last IATA general assembly took place in China in 2002.

The most recent forecast projected the cumulative net profit in the sector to have fallen this year to $3 billion (2.4 billion euros), or a margin of only 0.5 percent.

Those forecasts, made in March, were based on a barrel of Brent Crude Oil at $115, but the price rose to an average of $118 over the past five months, said Tyler.

In 2010, the cumulative net profit of airlines reached $15.8 billion, before plunging to $7.9 billion in 2011.

IATA is expected to publish its next financial forecasts Monday, with the Chinese and Middle Eastern markets expected to play a crucial role if profits are to pick up.

"Last year, Chinese airlines accounted for half of the industry's global net profit. Emirates, Etihad and Qatar Airways are growing fast and start to capture a large share of the world market," said Tyler.

The companies that are currently growing fastest are from the Middle East, with a passenger traffic rise of 16.1 percent year-on-year to April 2012.

Biofuels, an alternative to oil are also likely to come up. According to Tyler, biofuels "could reduce the carbon footprint by 80 percent". He cautioned, however, that their widespread adoption would require heavy government subsidies.

Loading...

Comments on Yahoo! pages are subject to our link to Comments Guidelines. You are responsible for any content that you post. Yahoo! is not responsible or liable in any way for comments posted by its users. Yahoo! does not in any way endorse or support comments made by its users.