Carol Monaghan (Glasgow North West) (SNP) 8. What recent
discussions he has had with Cabinet colleagues on the future of the
aviation industry after the UK leaves the EU. [904817] Stuart
C. McDonald (Cumbernauld, Kilsyth and Kirkintilloch East) (SNP)
19. What recent discussions he has had with Cabinet...Request free trial
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8. What recent discussions he has had with Cabinet
colleagues on the future of the aviation industry after
the UK leaves the EU. [904817]
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19. What recent discussions he has had with Cabinet
colleagues on the future of the aviation industry after
the UK leaves the EU. [904828]
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23. What recent discussions he has had with Cabinet
colleagues on the future of the aviation industry after
the UK leaves the EU. [904833]
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I meet my right hon. Friends and Cabinet colleagues on a
regular basis to discuss the UK’s exit from the EU.
Ministers and officials across Departments are working
closely to consider carefully the implications for the
aviation sector after we leave the EU.
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Last month we heard that the first formal talks on a
post-Brexit open skies deal with the US were cut short
after US negotiators offered an inferior deal to the one
we currently enjoy, so when does the Secretary of State
plan to return to the negotiating table, and will he do
so with a sense of reality about the impact that hard
Brexit is having on the aviation industry?
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The hon. Lady should not believe everything she reads in
the papers. The discussions taking place between my
Department and our counterparts in the United States have
been cordial and have been going well. There are no
issues that would act as an impediment towards a sensible
post-Brexit agreement between the two countries.
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A key requirement in any deal with the US may well be
that UK airlines are required to be UK majority owned,
yet very few would be able to meet that standard. What
are the realistic chances of the US ditching that
long-standing policy for the sake of the UK?
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Clearly, airline ownership is more complex as part of the
European Union than it was in the pre-EU days, but nobody
is seriously suggesting that we are not going to continue
with the same kind of transatlantic partnerships we have
at the moment. British Airways and American Airlines, for
example, operate in lockstep with each other. We will
progress in due time towards a sensible agreement that
continues the extremely prosperous, important and
successful transatlantic aviation routes.
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We have less than a year to sort this out. Already people
who are attempting to book foreign holidays for next
Easter, less than a year from now, are finding that they
are having to accept a clause in the contract that waives
any right to compensation if their holiday is cancelled
because of problems with the lack of an open skies
agreement. Is the Secretary of State trying to tell us
that those reports from reputable travel agents are myths
that we should not believe? Is it not a fact that the
travel industry and the aviation industry understand how
serious this problem is becoming and the Government, in
their complacency, do not?
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That is not accurate at all, as the hon. Gentleman will
find if he listens to the chief executives of the
International Airlines Group, EasyJet or a number of
other airlines. I have had no airline, bar one, come to
my desk and suggest that they are concerned about the
situation. I think we know which the one is, and no other
airline believes there is any likelihood of any
impediment to aviation next year. Indeed, there will not
be. Can you imagine, Mr Speaker, a situation where the
Spanish, Italian, Portuguese or Greek Governments did not
want holidaymakers to arrive from the United Kingdom in
2019? I have spoken to my counterparts and they snort
with derision at the idea that the planes will not fly.
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Snorting with derision may be the response the Secretary
of State has had, but people in my constituency who work
in the aviation industry are really concerned about how
we are going to function outwith the European Aviation
Safety Agency. Will he please tell us a bit more about
how we are going to function outwith the EASA?
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The Civil Aviation Authority is making all preparations
necessary if it needs to return to operating as a body in
the form that it used to be in. However, it is the
Government’s policy and our intent to remain part of
EASA. There is no reason not to: countries inside and
outside the European Union are part of it, and we supply
a substantial proportion of its expertise. The leadership
of EASA wants us to stay, and I am confident that, as we
get through the process of negotiation, that is where we
will end up.
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