Competition Commission tells BAA to sell two London airports
Competition chiefs today signalled the break-up of BAA's UK airport empire by proposing the company cease running two of its three London airports - Heathrow, Gatwick and Stansted.
The Competition Commission (CC) also recommended that Spanish-owned BAA lose control of either Edinburgh or Glasgow airport.
In a preliminary report, the CC said there were competition problems at each of BAA's seven UK airports "with adverse consequences for passengers and airlines".
The CC report - with a final report on BAA's airport ownership due at the end of the year - effectively means that BAA will have to give up running Gatwick and Stansted as the commission made it
clear that it was "unlikely to require the divestiture of Heathrow unless the sale of Gatwick or Stansted is likely to be impractical or ineffective".
BAA also runs Southampton and Aberdeen airports.
The commission was also critical of Government aviation policy, saying "aspects of Government policy restrict or distort competition by contributing to the current capacity constraints at BAA's
London airports".
BAA chief executive Colin Matthews said: "By calling not just for a fundamental restructure of BAA but also for a review of the Government's air transport White Paper, the commission risks delaying
the delivery of new runways and making better customer service less, not more, likely."
The CC said as well as now consulting to see which airports need to be sold, it was also seeking views on the need for "some form of enhanced regulation at Heathrow.
The CC said that it believed that "separate owners would be more active than BAA in exploiting existing opportunities" at south east England airports.
The commission also said there were competition problems arising from the existing planning system and the system of regulation for airports which is under the control of the Civil Aviation
Authority.
The commission said it did not expect to require the sale of either Southampton or Aberdeen airports.
Christopher Clarke, chairman of the CC's BAA airports inquiry group, said: "We have provisionally found that there are significant competition problems arising from BAA's common ownership of seven
UK airports.
"This is evident from a large number of factors including its lack of responsiveness to the needs of its airline customers and a lack of initiative in planning capacity.
"This has resulted in investment that is not tailored to the requirements of airport users and lower levels and quality of service for both airlines and passengers."
He went on: "We have also provisionally found that there are competition problems arising from the planning system, aspects of Government policy and the system of regulation."
"While we accept that constraints on runway capacity in the south east will limit the scope for the benefits of competition in the short-term, we believe that separate owners would be more active
than BAA in exploiting existing opportunities.
"Over time, we would expect these to increase significantly. In Scotland, where there are no similar capacity constraints, we believe separate owners of Edinburgh and Glasgow would similarly
improve their offerings.
"BAA has argued to us that there is no scope for competition to develop so long as there are capacity constraints. We take the opposite view. Unless the market is opened up to competition, there is
a serious risk that the current capacity constraints will persist, certainly for longer than in a better functioning market."
Mr Clarke said there was a serious shortage of capacity, particularly runway capacity, in south east England.
He went on: "The earliest new runway capacity will become available is 2015 at Stansted with no additional runway capacity possible at Heathrow before 2020.
"While we accept that Government policy and the planning regime have contributed to the lack of capacity, we have found that BAA as the owner and operator of these London airports has played a
major role in not pressing for more capacity sooner and in planning terminal and runway capacity on a conservative and sequential process such that its plans for one airport have been influenced by
its plans elsewhere. We accept, however, that BAA has been more successful in undertaking several smaller projects simultaneously."
"In Scotland, BAA has until recently been noticeably slow to develop new routes at Glasgow and Edinburgh, while at Aberdeen, its investment plans are regarded as unambitious despite relatively high
levels of profitability. At Southampton, it has shown a reluctance to respond to its customers' demands."
Mr Clarke said that commission had also been struck "by the differences in approach to both airline customers and development between BAA and owners and operators of regional airports".
He added: "We have identified significant competition between several pairs of such airports with benefits which include lower charges, development of new routes and a far greater responsiveness to
customers. In terms of capacity development, we note that both Manchester and London City airports have expanded successfully without explicit Government support."
Mr Clarke said the commission was also seeking views on improvements to the effectiveness of the current system of regulation and the need for a review of certain aspects of Government
policy.
He went on "In regard to regulation, we have found that the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) is constrained by the current statutory framework and that consideration needs to be given to bring it
closer into line with those of other sectoral regulators such as energy, water and telecommunications with better defined duties, objectives and powers, including the protection of the interests of
consumers, the promotion of competition and the ability to impose economic licence conditions.
"There is also scope for the CAA to play a more active role in facilitating agreement between BAA and the airlines by ensuring an appropriate framework for consultation which is currently seriously
lacking."
Mr Clarke went on: "The significant problems in the BAA airports market will not be solved overnight and changes in ownership would only be a first step in freeing up the market and providing
greater scope for more flexible development.
"Changes to regulation may similarly be important and there could be benefits available from a less prescriptive Government policy on airport capacity development though we recognise decisions on
such policies, which are wholly for Government, will be taken in a broader decision framework."
Mr Matthews said: "The commission's findings should be assessed in the light of the urgent need for new airport capacity and a modern regulatory framework, as well as the need - which we recognise
- for improved service from the airport operator.
"The findings state that the lack of runway capacity is a main reason for what it calls the current poor standards of service and the lack of resilience at times of disruption, which results in
regular delays.
"By calling not just for a fundamental restructure of BAA but also for a review of the Government's air transport White Paper, the commission risks delaying the delivery of new runways and making
better customer service less, not more, likely."
Mr Matthews went on: "We will be seeking urgent clarification from the Government of how it believes this report's findings can be reconciled with the air transport policy it established in 2003
and its current review of economic regulation.
"We note however that this is not the end of the Competition Commission process and we will continue to point out to the commission the many areas where we believe its analysis is flawed and its
remedies would be disproportionate and counter-productive.
"Just as the Government is about to make the decisions that could lead to the first full-length runways being built in the south east since the Second World War, the commission risks creating
uncertainty, delay and confusion at exactly the wrong time.
"In Scotland, the commission has apparently ignored the evidence presented by BAA, and supported by numerous respected third party organisations, that clearly demonstrates that Edinburgh and
Glasgow airports serve separate markets and therefore do not, and would not, compete, regardless of ownership."
Jim Callaghan, legal and regulatory affairs director for budget airline Ryanair, said: "We welcome the commission's comprehensive report into the market power of the BAA monopoly and fully endorse
its findings.
"Competition works - monopolies don't. BAA's monopoly control over the London airports has been highly detrimental to competition and consumers.
"BAA has long ignored the needs of its airline users and the travelling public and provided inefficient, gold-plated facilities, encouraged by an ineffectual regulator, the Civil Aviation
Authority."
David O'Brien, chairman of the Stansted Airline Consultative Committee, said: "The liberation of Stansted airport from the dead hand of the BAA monopoly will be a great first step in the recovery
of UK aviation, which for far too long has suffered gross inefficiencies, long queues and high costs.
"It is essential that competition within and between London airports is promoted, along with effective regulation, to the benefit of passengers, tourism and the economy.
"On behalf of our 25 million customers at Stansted, we now hope that Stansted will at last listen to its customers by reversing their 100% price hike, eliminate long queues and build efficient
facilities, which users actually need."
Gordon Dewar, of BAA Scotland, said: "We remain of the view that Glasgow and Edinburgh airports serve separate markets and that competition between the two is highly unlikely, regardless of
ownership.
"This is a view shared by many of Scotland's leading business organisations and is based on detailed and robust evidence. We are disappointed the commission has chosen to take a different view,
following what appears to be a flawed analysis of our airports and without presenting compelling evidence to support its case."
Mr Dewar went on: "We are also surprised by the suggestion that a greater level of regulation may be required at Aberdeen airport... but do not suggest this change for any other airport. It will be
important to gain a clearer understanding of the thinking behind the position the commission has taken on this issue, a view that could have serious implications for a number of other Scottish
airports.
"We strongly believe BAA's stewardship of Aberdeen, Edinburgh and Glasgow airports has served Scotland well."
The report followed many months of travel misery for airline passengers at UK airports, with Heathrow customers having the worst of it.
For many, the last straw came with the shambolic opening of Heathrow's £4.3 billion Terminal 5 (T5) in March.
Tim Bye, deputy chief executive of airline bmi, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "The first thing you have to say is that one of the problems of having all three (Heathrow, Gatwick and Stansted)
in the same ownership has been a lack of push to get additional capacity in those airports, because they have nobody to compete to drag other airlines to their facility.
"There is no competition. Gatwick management is not saying 'let's try and drag those airlines out of Heathrow to come to Gatwick offering better facilities and better prices', and so you just get
this lethargy of development, you get one project at a time.
"While T5 has been going on, really nothing else has been going on in terms of development, so I think a lot of it is to do with just getting that additional capacity into the marketplace."
Christopher Clarke, deputy chair of the Competition Commission, told the Today programme: "We think each of the London airports should be separately owned."
He said it was possible that Heathrow could be sold but added: "I should say that there is likely to be an inclination on our part to give the incumbent owner, that is BAA, the opportunity to hold
on to Heathrow and we would require, therefore, the sale of Gatwick and Stansted."
Mr Clarke went on: "Heathrow has special characteristics. It's the only hub airport in the south east of England, indeed the only hub airport in the whole of the UK.
"It attracts airlines because of its superior connectivity - in other words, its links with other parts of the world. It has a much higher level of transfer traffic, and given its importance and
its particular market position, we think it may be that Heathrow needs special consideration in terms of remedies."
A number of companies have already expressed interest in taking over the running of any BAA airports that could come up for sale, including the Manchester Airports Group (MAG), which operates
Manchester, Humberside, East Midlands and Bournemouth airports.
A spokesman for MAG said today that the group welcomed the commission's report.
He went on: "We have given evidence of our own experiences to the commission's inquiry and we believe that today's provisional findings are good news for passengers and airlines.
"MAG is an experienced, UK-owned airport operator with a strong track record in investing in the passenger experience, delivering efficient operations, a partnership approach to our business
relationships, managing our costs effectively and a world-leading environmental performance.
"We have consistently stated that the group is interested in acquiring assets that will add value for our shareholders and this could include one or more of the BAA airports.
"We are currently examining the details of today's report before making any decision about future acquisitions."
The UK's most up-to-date social housing and public sector news website

COMMENTS
No comments yet...
Be the first and post your views below.
Please Login to comment
To comment you must be logged in. You can either Login or Register