Its report into the structure, behaviour and regulation of BAA is a hugely important piece of work which rightly recognises that the current system of airport regulation is fundamentally flawed and BAA has acted against the interests of the travelling public for many years. It should be welcomed as a giant step towards a better set of rules for how our busiest airports are run.
It is particularly pleasing that finally a public body has recognised what the airlines have been saying for years – that regulation isn’t working and BAA is a failure. The CAA has never acknowledged any of this, and instead has allowed air passengers to pay the price for the over-priced acquisition of BAA. The CC has brought some clear thinking to this issue, which it will need to maintain. There are four critical issues that will need to be resolved if airports are going to ever deliver efficient passenger friendly services:
Andy Harrison, easyJet Chief Executive said:
“Today’s Competition Commission report is what we have been waiting for, an honest and unbiased assessment of our airports. They have said what everyone knows, that our airports aren’t working, and that BAA and regulation aren’t working. But let’s not kid ourselves into thinking that the break-up of BAA will automatically result in a better deal for the travelling public. Simply selling a monopoly airport from one greedy, highly indebted capitalist to another will benefit no-one part from the dealmakers in the City. Gatwick will be sold to the highest bidder, who will probably be highly indebted, like Ferrovial, and, like Ferrovial, will be expecting UK consumers to pick up the bill.
“Therefore the other part of the CC’s work is just as important. Without better regulation there will be no more protection for the consumer from the greedy new owners than there was from BAA - in fact it would just create a number of BAA “Mini-Me Monopolies” – smaller monopolists, hell-bent on sweating their assets and increasing charges, without improving the passenger experience.”