LONDON, Mar 1 (NNN-AGENCIES) – An additional tax will be added, to outbound flights from London’s Heathrow Airport, the largest airport in Britain, from Apr, adding pressure on many families, who want to travel abroad after a year of COVID-19 restrictions, local media reported.
The airport will charge an extra 8.90 pounds (about 12.46 U.S. dollars), also known as United Kingdom Exceptional Regulatory Charge, to all outgoing flights from Apr, increasing the fees it already charges, which include baggage handling, water, electricity and other services, the London-based Evening Standard newspaper reported.
This means a family of five, booking a summer holiday with British Airways, would have to pay an extra 44.50 pounds (about 62.32 dollars) for using the London airport, said the newspaper.
The stealth tax, which must be passed by airlines to Heathrow, is an attempt to recover from the airport’s financial loss last year, when a decrease in travel and passenger numbers left the airport with losses of two billion pounds (about 2.80 billion dollars) last year, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, said the newspaper.
A Heathrow spokesperson told the newspaper, “Heathrow makes absolutely zero profit from these services. The price is calculated purely to cover the cost of operating and maintaining the infrastructure that supports them.”
Heathrow airport plunged to an annual loss of two billion pounds in 2020, as the COVID-19 pandemic closed borders and the British government restricted most international travel.
The number of passengers who passed through slumped to 22.1 million last year, more than half of whom travelled in Jan and Feb, 2020, a fall of 73 percent, compared with a year earlier, and the smallest annual total since 1975, the Guardian newspaper reported.
Cargo volumes also fell by 28 percent during 2020, although some dedicated cargo flights helped the airport to offset some of the lost passenger travel, said the newspaper.
England is currently under the third national lockdown since the outbreak of the pandemic in the country. Similar restriction measures are also in place in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
To bring life back to normal, countries such as Britain, China, Germany, Russia and the United States have been racing against time to roll out COVID-19 vaccines.