The European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) hosted a debate
in response to the Commission's initiative on the social agenda
in air transport. EESC members and stakeholders of the aviation
sector came together at the March meeting of the Section for
Transport, Energy, Infrastructure and the Information Society
(TEN) to assess its implications from the perspective of civil
society.
The European Commission continues to push for higher social
standards in aviation and published an unprecedented document
on 1 March 2019, highlighting the main challenges pilots
and cabin crews in the EU face today. Maintaining and promoting
high social standards is a top priority for the EU’s Aviation
Strategy and the joint Bulc-Thyssen proposal sets out a series
of measures to further strengthen the social agenda in air
transport.
The report identifies a number of important trends:
- The growth of the EU's internal aviation market. In 2017, 1
billion passengers travelled by air within, from or to the EU.
Broadly speaking, approximately 9.4 million jobs are supported
by the aviation sector.
- The growth of the global aviation market. The demand for
pilots is expected to increase substantially. On top of the
existing stock, it is estimated that half a million pilots will
be needed in the next 20 years for the global aviation market.
- The emergence of new players on the scene, in particular
low-cost carriers, which account for nearly half of the EU
market.
In recent years, some airlines have introduced atypical or
non-standard forms of employment. While the predominant type
remains direct and permanent employment, between 9% and 19% of
cabin crews as well as 8% of pilots are employed through some
form of intermediary organisation, and this is concentrated in
the low-cost segment. There is concern about downward pressure
on working conditions and this has weakened the legal certainty
on the current safeguards of European legislation.
"This report is timely," the president of the TEN
section, Pierre Jean Coulon declared.
"At the EESC we have been working for years on the topic of a
socially fair aviation industry. Sustainability is very
important. We need an ongoing balance between economic,
environmental and social factors. When one of these elements
outweighs the others, there is a lack of equilibrium that can
lead to a fairly chaotic situation," he concluded.
EESC member Thomas Kropp pointed out
that it was vital to keep showing the advantages of the single
market to people, but at the same time also emphasising the
challenges for the future, especially in terms of critical
infrastructure and industrial policy. Pointing to ongoing
negotiations of international aviation agreements, in
particular with partners with lower social, environmental and
consumer protection standards, he stated that the main question
was whether we wanted to be able, in the future, to determine
our aviation policies or to leave them to other players.
The paper clarifies how the existing EU legislative framework
protects certain values, the objective being to ensure clear,
fair and enforceable rules, Jonathan
Stabenow from Commissioner Thyssen's Cabinet said,
noting that the rules on posting workers were not applied
enough in the aviation sector and that, as a case in point,
most cases of self-employment were unlikely to genuinely
qualify as such.
Hans Ollongren, representing the Airline
Coordination Platform (ACP), offered the industry's point of
view, highlighting that it had never been cheaper to fly and
that the aviation industry had become extremely efficient, but
affordable mobility should not be the result of unfair
competition, where rules were disrespected or tweaked in
various ways. It is therefore essential to ensure that airlines
that respect rules are not penalised.
The trade unions' perspective was showcased
by François Ballestero, from the European
Transport Workers' Federation (ETF), who indicated that the
report was incomplete as it did not deal with the forms of
contract that were increasingly being used for aircrews:
temporary assignments which actually correspond to permanent
jobs. The principle of equality of treatment should always be
respected, he maintained, making clear that he was against
social dumping in aviation.
On the consumers' side was EESC member Evangelia
Kekeleki, who stressed that passengers shared the
concerns and reservations of the workers. Users welcome cheap
fares but this does not mean agreeing to the infringement of
workers' rights or of environmental regulations. A
certification mechanism at European level could help consumers
understand whether certain social and environmental standards
are upheld.
Finally, Rosella Marasco, representing the
European Cockpit Association (ECA), underlined that the report
did not completely meet expectations because it lacked concrete
actions. However, it was important to note that the Commission
had acknowledged, for the first time, that the Social Pillar
also applied to aviation: there are rules and they apply to
aircrews too, without exception.