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German Coalition agrees on lower airline costs

Leaders of Germany's ruling coalition have agreed to lower costs for airlines, including tax reductions and more efficient security screenings.

Why it's important

Germany's aviation industry has complained for years that its high costs have put it at an unfair disadvantage to European competitors.

CONTEXT

Low-cost carriers such as Ryanair and EasyJet reduced capacity in Europe’s largest economy citing high costs.

Although passenger numbers have increased in Europe and are now up 3% compared to the pre-pandemic level, they still fell 19% in Germany. This is where Lufthansa has its main hubs at Frankfurt and Munich.

By the Numbers

The coalition led by the German Chancellor Friedrich Merz agreed to several measures that would save 350 million euros.

* Reducing the tax on tickets back to levels of 2024. This is a reduction of 70.83 euros per passenger for long-haul flights.

By 2029, the fees for air traffic control will be reduced by more than 10%

Reduce security check costs by improving processes

RESPONSES

Joachim Lang of the industry association BDL said that "the federal government kept its promise and ended years of spiraling costs for taxes, fees and air traffic in Germany."

Lufthansa's spokesperson said that the decision was important "because it has become very expensive to fly into and out of Germany".

REACTION

On Friday, shares of Lufthansa rose by about 2.5%.

(source: Reuters)