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The Dublin Airport Authority (DAA) notes the Commission for Aviation Regulations (CAR) final
determination on passenger charges for the 2010-2015 period and will now review the 180-page
report in detail to assess its likely impact on the operation of Dublin Airport.
CAR, which is the independent body which sets passenger charges at Dublin Airport, has today
(December 4) issued a determination on pricing that contains many variables. The most likely
scenario envisaged by CAR is that the average maximum passenger charge will increase to 9.97 for
the next five years.
This charge includes a fee for the provision of services to persons with reduced mobility (PRM),
which was never previously included in the passenger charge. So on a like-for-like basis, the
maximum average passenger charge will increase to 9.80, a 33% increase over the five-year
period.
Airport charges at Dublin Airport have fallen by 30% in real terms over the past 20 years. The
increase that has been suggested by the aviation regulator, will keep the airport's passenger
charge highly competitive compared to Dublin Airports European peers, as they have an average
charge of 12.50 per passenger.
This maximum fee proposed by CAR covers the cost of operating a major international airport, and
also the significant investments that have been made in new and improved facilities for
passengers and airlines using Dublin Airport over the past four years.
The passenger charge at Dublin Airport offers consumers genuine value for money, according to DAA
chief executive Declan Collier. The passenger charge has to fund the operation of Dublin Airport
365 days per year and makes a huge contribution towards the running costs of passenger facilities
and critical equipment and services on the airfield. The charge also has to fund the cost of
essential new facilities that are radically improving the passenger experience at Dublin Airport
and providing the essential infrastructure for future growth.
A series of Independent studies by Airports Council International (ACI), CAR, and others, have
all confirmed that Dublin Airport's charges are amongst the lowest of comparable airports in
Europe (see chart below). The ACI study found that airport charges at Dublin, which is Europes
tenth largest airport for international traffic, are cheaper than those at airports such as
Stansted, Gatwick, Brussels, Copenhagen, Lisbon, Zurich, Vienna, Munich, Oslo, and Athens. The
average price charged by the airports in the 2008 study was 12.50 at a time when the maximum
passenger charge at Dublin Airport was just 7.38.
In recent years, the DAA has invested heavily to address the inadequate facilities that had
pertained at Dublin Airport, for the benefit of passengers, airlines and the entire Irish
economy. This 1.2 billion investment programme, which includes the 609 million T2 project, is
being undertaken without any State funding and is aimed at improving, expanding and modernising
Dublin Airport for many decades to come.
New passenger facilities that have been delivered and are already in use include the Pier D
boarding gates, which radically improved comfort levels for passengers as they wait to board
their aircraft. And the extension to Terminal 1, which has improved the passenger journey to
Piers A and D, and also greatly enhanced the airside catering and retail facilities, the income
from which directly subsidises airport charges.
Unseen to most visitors to the airport, the DAA has also been investing in new airfield capacity
with 80 million worth of additional aircraft parking stands, taxi-ways and aprons, all of which
help increase the efficiency of the airport. About 50 million has also been invested to upgrade
the electricity, gas, water, waste and communications services throughout the airport campus.
The centrepiece of that investment programme is T2, Dublin Airports new passenger terminal,
which is due to open in November 2010. T2 will transform the travel experience for passengers
using Dublin Airport, Mr Collier said. The new terminal was not designed and built for next
year, but rather for the decades and the many millions of travellers to come. To view T2 merely
through the prism of the current downturn is a hugely short-sighted position. T2 is the right
terminal, at the right cost and will help position Ireland to take full advantage of the upturn
when it comes.

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