ATEC slams UK departure tax increase

The Australian Tourism Export Council (ATEC) has slammed moves by the UK government to increase the country’s air departure tax which will add up to $100 to a long-haul flight ticket from London.  

The Brown Labour Government today announced it would go ahead with a plan to change the Air Passenger Duty (APD)  to a distance-base charge based on a flight’s ‘carbon footprint’.

But ATEC MD Matt Hingerty said the climate change debate was a way to disguise the plan in “green wash”.

Hingerty said: “This APD is a total reversal of the free trade rhetoric recently promoted by the G20 group of nations as a measure to alleviate the current GFC.”

“Our local tourism industry, which employs nearly 500,000 people, can ill-afford additional taxes of this nature at this time,” he added.

The new tax will add a minimum of $170 to an economy ticket and nearly $350 to a business class ticket by this time next year.

Comments


  1. Helen Bissett
    26 Nov 09
    7:36 pm
  2. Hi,
    My husband and I booked return air tickets from Perth to London (travelling premium econony for the first time!) earlier this year for travel in April/May 2010. Our plan was to fly to UK, spend some time there – up to a week touring etc, then fly to Europe returning to London for maybe a few days before flying back to Australia. With the hike of the APd in the UK, we presume we will now have to pay the APD twice each? If this is the case, we will now not spend itme in the UK as it will eat into the budget we had planned to spend in the UK. So the UK tourism will be off our list and we will spend our money in Europe. Had we known about tthis hike in departure tax, we would have avoided the Uk all together.

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