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BA in fuel surcharge investigation
By David Browne
LONDON
(eTN) -- News that British Airways (BA) is
under investigation for price fixing has
sent shockwaves through the aviation
industry. Britain's competition (anti-trust)
regulator, the Office of Fair Trading, is
looking into price-fixing but is focused on
the fuel surcharge imposed by BA and other
airlines on top of airfares.
The Office of Fair Trading (OFT) would
not say if it had received a specific
complaint or allegation and said that no
assumptions of wrongdoing should be made as
the investigation has only just started. Also under the OFT's microscope is the
fare structure of transatlantic travel.
Fares between London and the United States
are significantly higher than on routes of a
similar or longer distance to other parts of
the world. The US Department of Justice is
also party to the investigation.
American Airlines and Virgin Atlantic
said they were cooperating with the
investigation but gave no indication about
whether they too are implicated in price
fixing. BA's fuel surcharge is currently £35
on a long-haul single journey; American
Airlines surcharges £37 per single trip from
the UK. American Airlines said today that it
had received a United States federal grand
jury subpoena in connection with a
government investigation into alleged price
fixing in the air passenger industry.
British Airways broke the news of the
probe in a brief statement to the London
Stock Exchange early on Thursday morning.
Reaction was swift, and shares in BA dropped
by 4.5 percent in value in early trading, as
stock traders feared that if found guilty of
price-fixing, BA could be fined as much as
10 per cent of its global sales revenue,
which would have a serious impact on
profits. Last month BA posted a full-year
profit of £620 million, 21 percent up on the
previous year.
The investigation could take months to
complete, and the bad publicity is a severe
blow to BA.
The seriousness of the situation was
emphasized by BA's immediate decision to
suspend its commercial director, Martin
George and head of communications, Iain
Burns. The airline gave no reason for the
suspensions, but such action at the outset
of an investigation is unprecedented.
In its statement, BA said, "The Office of
Fair Trading and the United States
Department of Justice (DOJ) are
investigating alleged cartel activity
involving British Airways and other airlines
in relation to pricing of passenger air
transportation, including fuel surcharges.
"British Airways' policy is to conduct
its business in full compliance with all
applicable competition laws. British
Airways is assisting the OFT and DOJ with
their investigations. Martin George,
Commercial Director, and Iain Burns, Head of
Communications, have been given leave of
absence during the investigation."
The OFT would give no details of its
investigation, but said that it was acting
under both civil and criminal powers. Its
civil law powers are in the Competition Act,
which covers companies, and the criminal
aspects arise from the Enterprise Act, which
covers actions by individual directors.
A spokesman for the OFT told eTurboNews
that they were "investigating British
Airways about alleged price co-ordination by
airlines in relation to surcharges on
long-haul flights to and from the UK. The
investigation is at an early stage so no
assumption can be made at this stage as to
whether there has been an infringement of
competition law.
"The OFT will not be in a position to
conclude whether the law has in fact been
infringed until it has completed its
investigations and assessed the available
evidence."
OFT officers visited BA's head office on
June 13. Earlier this year BA was caught up
in an investigation by the European
Commission about cargo pricing, along with
Air France and the German flag-carrier,
Lufthansa. That inquiry is continuing. The
price fixing investigation was welcomed by
the low-fares airline Ryanair, which does
not impose a fuel surcharge on its tickets.
"It is about time that British Airways'
rapacious fuel surcharges were
investigated," said Peter Sherrard,
Ryanair's head of communications. "It is
ridiculous that as the price of oil has
doubled from $35 to $70 a barrel, British
Airways has increased its fuel surcharge
14-fold. When British Airways collected more
in fuel surcharges (£470 million) than its
entire profit after tax last year something
is clearly wrong." |