EU plan on air traffic strikes 'a distraction'

Library

EU plan on air traffic strikes 'a distraction' from underlying issues

Proposals outlined by the European Commission to tackle disruption and cancellation of flights by tightening union laws are a distraction from the important issues facing the European aviation industry, says Prospect.



Plane in sky near air traffic control tower

Responding to the publication by the European Commission of proposals to restrict the right of air traffic controllers to take industrial action, Steve Jary, Prospect national secretary, said:

 “The lobbying we have seen by some airlines for restrictions on trade union and employment rights is a distraction from the most important issues the European aviation industry has to tackle.

“European data shows clearly that by far the most important cause of flight delays are airlines themselves. Infrastructure, technology and staffing capacity are also critical impediments to efficiency, connectivity and growth.

“Air traffic control strikes in a minority of countries account for just 1 per cent of total aviation delay. The way to avoid them is by taking a constructive approach to resolving the issues that lie behind them.”

Notes

Prospect analysis of efficiency and connectivity issues in European aviation, published in association with unions representing air traffic control professionals across Europe, found that:

  • Official data show that by far the largest share of flight delay is the responsibility of airlines themselves, accounting for 51% of primary delay over the period 2010-2015. Air Traffic Flow and Capacity Management delays accounted for 23%.
  • Official publications indicate that in 2015 – the only year for which an official figure is available – industrial action accounted for around 1% of total delay.
  • The cancellations that airline lobbyists A4E claim result from ATC strikes also constitute a small proportion of the total cancellations (subsequent to filing of final flight-plan) recorded in the Eurocontrol data, and probably an even smaller fraction if PwC/A4E’s method of counting were applied to cancellations with other causes.
  • Though airline lobbyists make dramatic claims about the economic costs of ATC strikes, if their model were valid the costs to European GDP of airline delays, other sources of disruption, or airport capacity limits would dwarf those they claim to be the cost of industrial action by air traffic controllers

The full report can be downloaded from the Prospect library.

Watch a short film summarising the findings.

More recent provisional data released by Eurocontrol for 2016 confirmed that:

  • ATC industrial action accounted for around 1% of total delay in 2016
  • The major reason for delays caused by air traffic navigation services is in fact understaffing – precisely the issue that much ATC industrial action is aimed at addressing
  • ATC industrial action is estimated to have caused 13,000 cancellations in 2016 – this would be 9% of all cancellations recorded by Eurocontrol, but probably a smaller proportion of the real total as it is likely to be based on a broader measurement
  • ATC industrial action reduced overall flight efficiency by just “0.03%” in 2016

The provisional 2016 data can be found at www.eurocontrol.int.