
EUROPE. Airports Council International (ACI) Europe today called on the European Commission to urgently adopt an EU Recovery Framework for Aviation and for governments to provide much-needed funding to support airports and aid the recovery of air connectivity.
With close to 200 airports already facing the risk of insolvency, the financial situation of the European airport industry will further worsen in the coming weeks, said the airports body. This is due to the reinstatement of local restrictions and lockdowns in several countries, which will hit domestic air travel, which until now proved more resilient than international, said ACI Europe.
The organisation noted that airlines have so far benefited from more than €31.8 billion in financial aid from European governments, but the support extended to airports has so far remained limited – reaching €840 million. “All this means that cash burn by airports, already at unsustainable levels, will only accelerate along with further job losses without urgent intervention.”
While the European Commission has extended its Temporary Framework enabling EU States to support the companies affected by the pandemic until June 2021, this is insufficient to address its devastating and lasting impact on aviation and airports in particular, said ACI Europe. The Temporary Framework should be extended to the end of 2021 and be supplemented by a Recovery Framework for Aviation including the following key measures:
- Compensation for damages due to COVID-19 to remain available for airports for as long as travel restrictions by Member States prevent the recovery of air traffic.
- A common framework allowing States to establish Air Connectivity Restart Schemes. These “targeted and time limited schemes would allow support for the resumption of air routes suspended due to the pandemic until 2023 through a degressive per passenger contribution, on a non-discriminatory basis,” said ACI Europe.
- Emergency Public Service Obligation to remain in place until the end of 2021.
- Immediate and longer-term adjustments to the 2014 Aviation State aid guidelines to extend the possibility for airports to receive both operating and investment aid – with a particular focus on the financing of climate action and sustainability projects.
ACI Europe Director General Olivier Jankovec said: “Large scale job losses and insolvency are no longer worst case projections for Europe’s airports. We’re already looking down the barrel of the gun, and the crisis continues to deepen. The situation requires urgent and decisive action with an ad hoc Recovery Framework for Aviation at EU level enabling support beyond 2021 and governments providing financial support accordingly. That should include as a priority extending supportive unemployment schemes for all staff working at airports, compensating airports for lost revenues and supporting the rebuilding of air connectivity up to 2023.”
He added: “Helping airports to stay afloat and supporting air connectivity means protecting livelihoods in countless local and regional communities across Europe. Industry is playing its part to the fullest, but it ultimately falls to governments to act now to avoid the irreversible.”



