FREE E-Newsletter
Wings Magazine
Subscribe
  ABOUT US   |   CONTACT US   |   SUBSCRIPTION CENTRE   |   ADVERTISE   |   SITEMAP
MAGAZINE
Current Issue
Past Issues
News Archives
Web Exclusives
Video
Photo Gallery
 
MARKETPLACE
Aviation Books
Job Board
Classifieds
New Products
COMMUNITY
Events
AME Hall of Fame
100th Anniversary
Aviation Quiz
Association News
 
RESOURCES
A-List
E-Newsletter
Links
Sitemap
Careers in Aviation
Publications
Helicopters Magazine Careers in Aviation
Charting a New Course

Nav Canada is reviewing its fee structure. Stung by recent rate hikes, will stakeholders be on side?

Written by Raymon Kaduck   
Nav Canada is reviewing its fee structure. Stung by recent rate hikes, will stakeholders be on side? 251-navNav Canada has raised its fees again putting the notfor- profit air navigation service (ANS) provider on the receiving end of sharp but largely behind-thescenes criticism from leading stakeholders. One exception has been Air Canada’s Robert Milton, who has described air navigation fees as “spinning out of control.”

Nav Canada admits that charges have risen sharply since 2002, but points out that they had fallen below 1997 levels (when the privatization of ANS services took place) prior to that. On balance, the net increase has remained below the consumer price index, meaning that the corporation, which is mandated to recover its costs every year, has managed to contain its capital and operating budget below the general rate of inflation.

Still, a 10% hike in user charges for 2005 has been hard to take for an industry that has long felt it is being held hostage by monopoly service providers.

In January, Nav Canada released a discussion paper on its fees and charges. It is the first comprehensive consultation on the subject since the original charging structure was put in place. It is early days yet and air carriers and the corporate aviation community appear to be taking a wait-and-see position. Even so, some new views are likely to be brought forward and several old battles re-ignited in the months ahead.

According to Arthur Andreaseen, Nav Canada’s assistant vice-president of revenue and commercial relations, it is business practices and not customer demand that will steer the process. “The review is not driven by the perception that there is a big issue anywhere. It is simply a good business practice to look at it from time to time – to take stock, to reconfirm and to update, and we are in that process now. There are all kinds of views, but there were all kinds of views when we did the original consultation, and there was a balancing by the board to find something reasonable.”

As a result, the discussion paper is about charging philosophies rather than any specific proposal. “It is just a discussion of issues,” Andreaseen emphasized. “After that, we will assemble everything that is said and see if there is any basis for a modification. If there is, that proposal would go through the normal consultation process.”

Certainly one of the key debates will be whether the allocation of current charges to international versus domestic operators reflects fair distribution. International airlines, for example, have long complained about the cost of flights through northern airspace. The rationale is that the charges are considerably higher than they are over the North Atlantic, without a compensating benefit. The view is that the overflying international carriers are subsidizing the domestic carriers flying below them.

WHO PAYS FOR WHAT?
The Civil Air Navigation Services Commercialization Act (CANSCA), which governs Nav Canada’s practices and charging principles, forbids the service provider from charging more for services in the north than it would charge for similar services provided in the south. Nevertheless, the international air community feels it has a case.

But does it? Nav Canada has made substantial efforts to reduce the cost of high latitude over-flights. A northern radar program, for example, deployed six new radars that allow air traffic controllers to use radar separation instead of procedural methods. This means that operators can fly more often at requested altitudes and over preferred routings. And while such costs show up as an increase in Nav Canada spending, any offsetting decrease in fuel bills for the operators is largely invisible.

ALL BLIPS ARE NOT EQUAL
One of the more heated battles will be over charges linked to maximum takeoff weight (MTOW), and will likely pit Canadian Business Aviation Association (CBAA) and Air Transport Association of Canada (ATAC) members against the larger airlines represented by the International Air Transport Association (IATA). Weight-based charging principles are used by almost every other ANS in the world, but have long been considered an unfair practice by international airlines and other operators of heavy aircraft. The rationale is that essentially the cost of providing an IFR service to an aircraft is independent of weight. One blip on a radar screen is much the same as any other.

On the surface at least, the argument makes sense, except that on larger aircraft, produce higher consumer benefits from the use of the ANS. Discussion papers that preceded the creation of Nav Canada specifically linked benefits to the charging method: “Aircraft weight is taken into account to recognize that larger aircraft receive greater benefits (i.e., carry more passengers and/or cargo).

The CANSCA allows for price discrimination based on the value of the service to users. One view of equity is that the burden of paying for ANS is apportioned fairly if passengers (indirectly) paid roughly the same amount for the distance they travelled in the system, regardless of the size of aircraft that was used by the carrier.

The magnitude of the redistribution of costs would be an issue in itself. For example, elimination of MTOW en route charges could drop Boeing 747-400 rates by 38%, but would drive up BE1900 rates by 987%, according to Nav Canada’s discussion paper.

Predictably, IATA would like Nav Canada to create an international precedent by dropping MTOW from the formula. Equally predictably, CBAA believes that the formula should retain a weight-based factor. Otherwise, a larger portion of the total cost of the system would be shifted to them, according to president Rich Gage: “The real hot-button issue for us right now is modification of weightbased charges. Any move in that direction would be a big concern for our members. There are constraints in the way that Nav Canada is constituted and the principle is accepted internationally. I think there will be a lot of arm-waving, rhetoric and viewpoints expressed, but I don’t think there will be any legislative change.”

SAVING FOR A RAINY DAY
Another key issue in the review will certainly concern the rate stabilization fund. Since it finished its initial consultations, Nav Canada has maintained a ‘rainy day fund’ that would allow it to avoid raising rates when there was a drop in demand. This makes sense because a drop in demand is usually accompanied by financial concerns for the airlines. Airlines’ margins are tight at the best of times and most of their operating costs are fixed. This means that demand reduction almost invariably impacts profit.

Nav Canada’s $75 million contingency fund had been calculated on a worse case assumption that Canadian Airlines would go bankrupt and two years would be needed for traffic levels to rebound. Nobody could predict 9/11 and how quickly it would drain away Nav Canada’s reserve.

Part of the recent run-up in charges relates to replenishing the ‘rainy day’ account, which had a $116 million shortfall in 2003. Nav Canada has made considerable progress in replenishing the fund, but is still $105 million shy of the pre-9/11 surplus.

The rate stabilization fund seems, therefore, to be a prudent precaution, but it also means that airline profits from any period are being retained in the ANS against future downturns. Airline managers, on the other hand, are notoriously focused on the short term. Essentially, a large rate stabilization fund is a cost to an airline in the current period that may create a benefit to a competitor in a future downturn. The size of the rate stabilization fund is a tug-of-war at the best of times.

Cliff Mackay, CEO of ATAC, reflects an airline community in which there is not a clear consensus: “[The fund] always was controversial and it will be debated again. To date, the ATAC position has been that, on balance, it is a prudent thing to do, and this was proven when it allowed Nav Canada to delay rate increases for a significant amount of time following 9/11. One of the debates among our members will definitely be along the lines of ‘how much is enough’?”

Recent IATA statements indicate that the organization believes the rate stabilization fund should not exist at all and that risk management is best carried on by the individual companies themselves, rather than collectively. There are rational arguments on both sides of the issue. Airlines are in the position of deciding for themselves what is prudent. On the other hand, this creates a potential ‘moral hazard’ if airlines believe they can rely on political appeals for help, and therefore have a reduced incentive to properly fund their requirements. So far, at least, the Canadian government has refused to go beyond the veil to intervene in the relationship between airlines and the ANS.

MORE THAN THE AVIATION COMMUNITY HAS A STAKE HERE
Airlines are not the only stakeholders. Nav Canada financed the purchase of the ANS from the federal government by issuing bonds that are rated as very secure. Dominion Bond Rating Service confirmed Nav Canada’s medium-term notes and revenue bonds at AA last year, a superior credit rating, according to DBRS’s Ryan McGaw, but the rate stabilization fund is not the key to the rating: “It is not of that much importance to the bondholder. This is a smoothing methodology. If they didn’t have this, they would have hiked rates.”

The high rating primarily results from Nav Canada’s ability to charge its customers whatever it costs to run the system, said McGaw: “If they hiked rates to the point that airplanes couldn’t fly, then we’d have a problem with it.”

CREDIT DUE
One of the issues in the last few years is that two major bankruptcies cost Nav Canada significant amounts in lost revenues. Many small-airline managers are critical of the fact that Air Canada had $45 million owing to Nav Canada when it slipped into CCAA restructuring – which is now being extracted from them in the form of increased fees.

The situation today is better, according to McGaw: “They managed to recover $15 million of that in fiscal 2004, so the net loss was $30 million. Since then, Nav Canada has tightened its receivables policy and limited its exposure to any given customer to $4 million.”

WHAT OF THE LITTLE GUYS?
There are other issues that will drive this debate, including what to charge very small operators and private owners, who do not think they should be paying at all. This message has been consistent since the original consultation, according to Kevin Psutka, president of the Canadian Owners and Pilots Association (COPA). “Our position from day one was that we are not in favour of any fee being imposed on private aviation because we are already paying a fuel excise tax that remains in place to this day. As long as it is not reduced or an equivalent amount transferred to Nav Canada on behalf of our sector, we can’t be in favour of any fee.”

Despite differing views, most aviation companies and associations appear willing to embrace the process. “It’s healthy to have a review of fees and services every now and then,” said Rich Gage. “We need to demonstrate that the appropriate level of service is being provided measured against the demand. We need to ensure that we don’t have traffic lights where a stop sign would do. And we need to make clear that Nav Canada is not responsible for economic development.”