Statutory Instruments

1995 No. 3160

CIVIL AVIATION

The Civil Aviation (Route Charges for Navigation Services) Regulations 1995

Made

6th December 1995

Laid before Parliament

11th December 1995

Coming into force

1st January 1996

Whereas in pursuance of tariffs approved under the Eurocontrol Convention(1) and under the Multilateral Agreement relating to Route Charges concluded at Brussels on 12th February 1981(1) (being international agreements to which the United Kingdom is a party), the Secretary of State for Transport has determined rates of charges, as specified in the following Regulations, payable to Eurocontrol in respect of navigation services provided for aircraft:

Now, therefore, the Secretary of State for Transport in exercise of the powers conferred by sections 73(1)(a), (1A), (3), (4), (6), 74(4) and (5) and 102(2)(b) of the Civil Aviation Act 1982(2) and of all other powers enabling him in that behalf, hereby makes the following Regulations:

Citation and commencement

1.  These Regulations may be cited as the Civil Aviation (Route Charges for Navigation Services) Regulations 1995 and shall come into force on 1st January 1996.

Revocation

2.  The Regulations specified in Schedule 1 hereto are hereby revoked.

Interpretation

3.—(1) In these Regulations—

(2) Other expressions used in these Regulations shall, unless the context otherwise requires, have the same respective meanings as in the Air Navigation (No. 2) Order 1995(3).

Charge to be paid to Eurocontrol

4.—(1) Subject to the provisions of these Regulations the operator of an aircraft (in whatsoever State it is registered) for which navigation services (not being navigation services provided in connection with the use of an aerodrome) are made available in a specified airspace shall pay to Eurocontrol, in respect of each flight by that aircraft in that airspace, a charge for those services (hereinafter referred to as “the charge”) at the appropriate rate calculated in accordance with regulation 6 or 7 of these Regulations, whichever shall apply in the circumstances.

(2) If Eurocontrol is unable, after taking reasonable steps, to ascertain who is the operator, it may give notice to the owner of the aircraft that it will treat him as the operator until he establishes to the reasonable satisfaction of Eurocontrol that some other person is the operator; and from the time when the notice is given Eurocontrol shall be entitled, for so long as the owner is unable to establish as aforesaid that some other person is the operator, to treat the owner as if he were the operator, and for that purpose the provisions of these Regulations (other than this paragraph) shall apply to the owner of the aircraft as if he were the operator.

(3) The operator of an aircraft shall not be required to pay any charge to Eurocontrol under these Regulations in respect of a flight if he has previously paid to Eurocontrol in respect of that flight a charge of the same or a greater amount under the law of a country specified in column 1 of Schedule 2 hereto.

Payment

5.—(1) The amount of the charge shall be payable to Eurocontrol at its principal office in Brussels and shall be paid in ECUs.

(2) Without prejudice to any existing rule of law relating to the recovery of a debt expressed in ECUs, the equivalent in sterling of the charge may be recovered in any court of competent jurisdiction in the United Kingdom.

(3) If the amount of the charge payable under regulation 4(l) is not paid by the operator of the aircraft within 24 days of the date payment is demanded by Eurocontrol, interest calculated in accordance with paragraph (4) below on the unpaid amount shall be paid from that day until the date when payment is made.

(4) Interest payable under paragraph (3) shall be simple interest calculated from day to day at the rate of 8.69%.

(5) Nothing in this regulation shall prevent Eurocontrol from accepting as a good discharge payment other than in ECUs or at places other than the principal office of Eurocontrol.

Calculation of the Charge

6.—(1) Except in the case of flights specified in regulation 7 of these Regulations, the charge shall be calculated in ECUs according to the following formula—

r = N × U

where

  • r is the charge for the flight, N is the number of service units relating to that flight and U is the appropriate unit rate specified in column 3 of Schedule 2 hereto in relation to the specified airspace through which the flight is made, increased or decreased as the case may be by the same percentage as the relevant national currency has increased or decreased against the ECU as compared with the rate of exchange specified in column 4 of the said Schedule in relation to that airspace.

(2) For the purpose of the preceding paragraph, the number of service units relating to a flight shall be calculated in accordance with the following formula—

N = d × p

where

  • d is the distance factor for the flight in the specified airspace in question and p is the weight factor for the aircraft concerned.

(3) For the purposes of the preceding paragraph—

(a)the distance factor shall be the number of kilometres in the great circle distance between the points specified in paragraph (4) of this regulation minus 20 kilometres for each landing and take-off in the specified airspace in question, divided by 100 and expressed to two places of decimals, and

(b)the weight factor, subject to the provisions of paragraph (6) of this regulation, shall be equal to the square root of the quotient obtained by dividing by 50 the number of metric tonnes of the maximum total weight authorised of the aircraft and shall be expressed to two places of decimals.

(4) The points referred to in paragraph (3) of this regulation are—

(a)the aerodrome of departure within the specified airspace in question or, if there is no such aerodrome, the point specified in paragraph (5) of this regulation as the standard point of entry into that airspace for the route in question or, in the case specified in the proviso to that paragraph, the actual point of entry into that airspace; and

(b)the aerodrome of first destination within the specified airspace in question or, if there is no such aerodrome, the point specified in paragraph (5) of this regulation as the standard point of exit from that airspace for the route in question or, in the case specified in the proviso to that paragraph, the actual point of exit from that airspace.

(5) The standard points of entry and exit referred to in paragraph (4) of this regulation are the points, as described in the United Kingdom Air Pilot or relevant AIP as the case may be, where the median line of the appropriate airway or upper Air Traffic Service route so described crosses the boundary of the airspace in question.

(6) The weight factor for an aircraft of any type shall be calculated by reference to the maximum total weight authorised of the heaviest aircraft of that type:

7.  The charge in relation to a flight which enters a specified airspace and in respect of which the aerodrome of departure or the aerodrome of first destination, as the case may be, is specified in column 2 of Schedule 3 hereto and the aerodrome of the first destination or the aerodrome of departure, as the case may be, is situated in any one of the zones specified in column 1 of that Schedule shall be calculated in ECUs according to the following formula—

C = Z × p

where

  • C is the charge payable, Z is the charge specified in column 3 of the said Schedule (appropriate to the maximum total weight authorised of 50 metric tonnes) increased or decreased as the case may be by the same percentage as the relevant national currencies have increased or decreased against the ECU as compared with the rate of exchange specified in column 4 of Schedule 2 hereto in relation to that airspace and p is the weight factor of the aircraft concerned determined in accordance with regulation 6(3)(b) and 6(6) of these Regulations.

8.—(1) For the purposes of regulations 6 and 7 the rate of exchange of the ECU to a national currency shall be—

(a)where the average monthly rate of exchange of the ECU to that national currency is established by the Commission of the European Communities, such rate of exchange, and publication in the Official Journal of the European Communities (Information and Notices) for the month preceding the month during which the flight takes place shall be sufficient evidence of that matter unless the contrary is proved; and

(b)where the average monthly rate of exchange of the ECU to that national currency is not established by the Commission of the European Communities, such rate of exchange as is calculated by reference to the rate of exchange between the ECU and the United States dollar and between the relevant national currency and the United States dollar established by the International Monetary Fund and publication in the International Financial Statistics of the International Monetary Fund for the month preceding the month during which the flight takes place shall be sufficient evidence of that matter unless the contrary is proved; and a document purporting to be the International Financial Statistics published by the International Monetary Fund shall in any proceedings be received in evidence and, unless the contrary is proved, be deemed to be such a document.

(2) (a) Where the average monthly rate of exchange of the ECU to a national currency is established by the Commission of the European Communities, in the event that the Commission of the European Communities does not publish the Official Journal (Information and Notices) for the month preceding the month during which the flight takes place, a certificate given by or on behalf of the Treasury stating the average monthly rate of exchange of the ECU to the relevant national currency for the month preceding the month during which the flight takes place shall be sufficient evidence of that matter unless the contrary is proved; and a document purporting to be such a certificate shall in any proceedings be received in evidence and, unless the contrary is proved, be deemed to be such a certificate.

(b)Where the average monthly rate of exchange of the ECU to a national currency is not established by the Commission of the European Communities, in the event that the International Monetary Fund does not publish the International Financial Statistics for the month during which the flight takes place, a certificate given by or on behalf of the Treasury stating the average monthly rate of exchange between the ECU and the United States dollar and between the relevant national currency and the United States dollar for the month preceding the month during which the flight takes place shall be sufficient evidence of that matter unless the contrary is proved; and a document purporting to be such a certificate shall in any proceedings be received in evidence and, unless the contrary is proved, be deemed to be such a certificate.

Exempt Flights

9.  These Regulations shall not apply to the following flights —

(i)flights by military aircraft;

(ii)flights made for the purposes of search and rescue operations;

(iii)flights by aircraft of which the maximum total weight authorised is 5700kg or less made entirely in accordance with the Visual Flight Rules in the Rules of the Air Regulations 1991(4);

(iv)flights terminating at the aerodrome from which the aircraft has taken off;

(v)flights other than the flights referred to in paragraph (i) of this regulation made by aircraft which are used in the service of a State (including for customs or police purposes) and which are not made for commercial purposes;

(vi)flights made exclusively for the purpose of checking or testing equipment used or intended to be used as aids to air navigation;

(vii)flights made exclusively for the purpose of the instruction or testing of flight crew within the specified airspace of the United Kingdom;

(viii)flights made by aircraft of which the maximum total weight authorised is less than two metric tonnes;

(ix)flights made by helicopters between any point in the United Kingdom to a vessel or an offshore installation within the area bounded by straight lines joining successively the following points—

(x)flights made by helicopters between any point in the United Kingdom to a vessel or an offshore installation within the area bounded by straight lines joining successively the following points—

Detention and sale of aircraft for unpaid charges

10.  Where default is made in the payment of the charges incurred in respect of any aircraft under these Regulations Eurocontrol may request the CAA to act on behalf of Eurocontrol in accordance with the provisions of regulations 11 to 14.

11.  Where such a request has been made, the CAA or an authorised person may on behalf of Eurocontrol, subject to the provisions of this and the following regulations, take such steps as are necessary to detain, pending payment, either—

(a)the aircraft in respect of which the charges were incurred (whether or not they were incurred by the person who is the operator of the aircraft at the time when the detention begins); or

(b)any other aircraft of which the person in default is the operator at the time when the detention begins;

and if the charges are not paid within 56 days after the date when the detention begins, the CAA may sell, subject to the following regulations, the aircraft on behalf of Eurocontrol in order to satisfy the charges.

12.  The CAA or the authorised person concerned shall not detain, or continue to detain, an aircraft on behalf of Eurocontrol under these Regulations by reason of any alleged default in the payment of the charges payable under these Regulations if the operator of the aircraft or any other person claiming an interest therein —

(a)disputes that the charges, or any of them, are due or, if the aircraft is detained under regulation 11(a) of these Regulations, that the charges in question were incurred in respect of that aircraft; and

(b)gives to Eurocontrol, pending the determination of the dispute, sufficient security for the payment of the charges which are alleged to be due.

13.—(a) The CAA shall not sell an aircraft on behalf of Eurocontrol under these Regulations without the leave of the court; and the court shall not give leave except on proof that a sum is due to Eurocontrol for charges under these Regulations, that default has been made in the payment thereof and that the aircraft which the CAA seeks leave to sell on behalf of Eurocontrol is liable to sale under these Regulations by reason of default.

(b)In this regulation, “the court” means, as respects England, Wales and Northern Ireland, the High Court, and as respects Scotland, the Court of Session.

14.  The CAA shall, before applying to the court for leave to sell an aircraft on behalf of Eurocontrol under regulation 13 above, take such steps for bringing the proposed application to the notice of interested persons and for affording them an opportunity of becoming a party to the proceedings as are set forth in Schedule 4 to these Regulations. If such leave is given, the CAA shall secure that the aircraft is sold on behalf of Eurocontrol for the best price that can reasonably be obtained; but failure to comply with any requirement of this regulation or of the said Schedule in respect of any sale, while actionable as against the CAA at the suit of any person suffering loss in consequence thereof, shall not, after the sale has taken place, be a ground for impugning its validity.

15.  The proceeds of any sale under these Regulations shall be applied as follows, and in the following order, that is to say —

(a)in payment of any customs duty which is due in consequence of the aircraft having been brought into the United Kingdom;

(b)in payment of the expenses incurred by the CAA in detaining, keeping and selling the aircraft, including its expenses in connection with the application to the court;

(c)in payment of the charges in respect of any aircraft which the court has found to be due from the operator by virtue of these or any other Regulations under section 73 of the Civil Aviation Act 1982;

(d)in payment of any interest on unpaid charges incurred in respect of any aircraft which the court has found to be due from the operator by virtue of these Regulations;

(e)in payment of any airport charges incurred in respect of the aircraft which are due from the operator of the aircraft to the person owning or managing the aerodrome at which the aircraft was detained under these Regulations;

and the surplus, if any, shall be paid to or among the person or persons whose interests in the aircraft have been divested by reason of the sale.

16.  The power of detention and sale conferred by these Regulations in respect of an aircraft extends to the equipment of the aircraft and any stores for use in connection with its operation (being equipment and stores carried in the aircraft) whether or not the property of the person who is its operator, and references to the aircraft in regulations 11 to 15 of these Regulations include, except where the context otherwise requires, references to any such equipment and stores.

17.  The power of detention conferred by these Regulations in respect of an aircraft extends to any aircraft documents carried in it, and any such documents may, if the aircraft is sold under these Regulations, be transferred by the CAA to the purchaser.

18.  The power conferred by these Regulations to detain an aircraft may be exercised on any occasion when the aircraft is on an aerodrome to which section 88 of the Civil Aviation Act 1982 applies or at Belfast International Airport, Belfast City Airport or Londonderry (Eglinton) Airport.

19.  Nothing in these Regulations shall prejudice any right of Eurocontrol to recover any charges, or any part thereof, or interest on unpaid charges, by action.

Signed by authority of the Secretary of State for Transport

Goschen

Parliamentary Under Secretary of State,

Department of Transport

6th December 1995

Regulation 2

SCHEDULE 1REVOCATIONS

(1)(2)
Regulations RevokedReferences
The Civil Aviation (Route Charges for Navigation Services) Regulations 1994S.I. 1994/3071
The Civil Aviation (Route Charges for Navigation Services) (Amendment) Regulations 1995S.I. 1995/1004
The Civil Aviation (Route Charges for Navigation Services) (Second Amendment) Regulations 1995S.I. 1995/1438
The Civil Aviation (Route Charges for Navigation Services) (Third Amendment) Regulations 1995S.I. 1995/2329

Regulations 3(1), 6(1) and 7

SCHEDULE 2SPECIFIED AIRSPACES

(1)(2)(3)(4)
CountryPublication in which FIRS are describedUnit Rate in ECUsEstablished at a Rate of exchange of
*

Excluding Shanwick FIR

AustriaAIP Austria68.691 ECU=13.1368 Sch
BelgiumAIP Belgique79.501 ECU=38.4076 BF
CyprusAIP Cyprus18.681 ECU=0.591234 £Cy
Czech RepublicAIP Czech Republic49.871 ECU=34.6570 CZK
DenmarkAIP Denmark56.601 ECU=7.27576 Kr
FranceAIP France (France Métropolitaine)64.621 ECU=6.49970 FF
GermanyAIP Germany79.131 ECU=1.86783 DM
GreeceAIP Greece16.701 ECU=303.116 Dra
HungaryAIP Hungary17.941 ECU=169.950 Hf
Ireland, Republic ofAIP Ireland23.301 ECU=0.819810 £Ir
MaltaAIP Malta39.011 ECU=0.464952 Lm
NetherlandsAIP Netherlands60.771 ECU=2.09247 G
NorwayAIP Norway54.011 ECU=8.30090 KR
PortugalAIP Portugal36.81 Santa Maria FIRS-9.381 ECU=196.275 Esc
SloveniaAIP Slovenia75.531 ECU=152.120 SIT
SpainAIP EspañaMadrid & Barcelona FIRS-44.39 Canaries FIRS-46.681 ECU=161.013 Pts
SwitzerlandAIP Switzerland87.751 ECU=1.55475 SF
TurkeyAIP Turkey32.551 ECU=59844.8 LT
United KingdomUnited Kingdom Air Pilot*75.861 ECU=£0.843181

Regulation 7

SCHEDULE 3

(1)(2)(3)
Aerodromes of departure (or of first destination) situatedAerodromes of first destination (or of departure)Amount of the charge in ECUs
ZONE 1
— between W01400 and W11000 and North of N5500 with the exception of Iceland,
Copenhagen538.92
Frankfurt1194.15
London743.18
Paris1001.36
Prestwick,389.16
ZONE II
— between W04000 and W11000 and N2800 and N5500
Abidjan121.47
Amsterdam872.75
Athens1125.75
Bahrain1672.56
Banjul117.72
Barcelona687.32
Basle909.79
Belfast173.99
Berlin1019.83
Birmingham420.30
Bordeaux521.94
Bristol422.32
Brussels855.51
Bucharest1608.46
Budapest1420.71
Cairo1137.90
Cardiff293.66
Casablanca297.32
Cologne—Bonn1008.88
Copenhagen712.84
Dakar117.63
Dublin135.59
Düsseldorf1041.08
East Midlands463.53
Frankfurt1120.59
Geneva908.38
Glasgow253.63
Hamburg1033.97
Helsinki533.43
Istanbul1562.05
Jeddah1250.08
Johannesburg117.91
Kiev1000.45
Lagos118.28
Larnaca1354.30
Las Palmas (Canary Islands)420.48
Leeds and Bradford414.22
Lille651.94
Lisbon340.67
London499.33
Luxembourg886.55
Lyons788.22
Maastricht818.47
Madrid487.88
Malaga548.89
Manchester381.87
Manston564.47
Marseille918.43
Milan1016.87
Monrovia117.72
Moscow502.21
Munich1316.03
Nantes461.25
Naples1009.43
Newcastle397.53
Nice1004.95
Oporto250.87
Oslo487.36
Ostend636.91
Paris725.25
Ponta Delgada (Azores)122.13
Prague1263.46
Prestwick253.63
Riyadh1510.13
Rome1141.92
Sal Island (Cape Verde)117.63
Santa Maria (Azores)130.66
Santiago224.49
Shannon96.14
Sofia1512.54
Stockholm428.97
Stuttgart1049.44
Tel-Aviv1453.11
Tenerife385.07
Toulouse—Blagnac671.02
Turin1019.80
Venice1115.86
Vienna1520.55
Warsaw859.34
Zürich1071.12
(1)(2)(3)
Aerodromes of departure (or of first destination) situatedAerodromes of first destination (or of departure)Amount of the charge in ECUs
ZONE III
— West of W11000 and between N2800 and N5500
Amsterdam845.83
Cologne—Bonn984.51
Copenhagen616.61
Düsseldorf957.29
Frankfurt1172.83
Geneva1177.66
Glasgow347.44
Helsinki447.74
London698.68
Luxembourg1072.81
Madrid391.65
Manchester552.26
Milan1006.87
Moscow604.37
Munich1421.93
Paris831.35
Prestwick347.44
Rome1006.87
Shannon91.59
Warsaw570.15
Zürich1261.31
ZONE IV
— West of W04000 and between N2000 and N2800 (including Mexico)
Amsterdam882.40
Barcelona765.76
Berlin918.86
Brussels758.60
Cologne—Bonn940.04
Düsseldorf974.57
Frankfurt1006.31
Hamburg943.10
Helsinki529.30
Las Palmas (Canary Islands)527.44
Lisbon385.75
London589.57
Luxembourg955.50
Madrid524.07
Manchester357.20
Milan895.39
Munich1168.43
Paris662.59
Prague1249.51
Rome1067.43
Sal Island (Cape Verde)76.82
Santa Maria (Azores)131.41
Santiago371.96
Shannon165.57
Vienna1384.52
Zürich985.29
ZONE V
— West of W04000 and between the Equator and N2000
Amsterdam1027.75
Basle1015.34
Barcelona792.81
Berlin1286.85
Bordeaux659.37
Brussels815.22
Cologne—Bonn1026.33
Düsseldorf1028.41
Frankfurt1063.52
Glasgow375.32
Hamburg1051.10
Hanover1073.25
Helsinki880.86
Las Palmas (Canary Islands)541.80
Lisbon457.25
London762.56
Lyons911.82
Madrid617.24
Manchester534.86
Marseilles1024.82
Milan1029.50
Munich1187.49
Nantes624.69
Oporto444.52
Paris778.97
Porto Santo (Madeira)272.35
Prestwick375.32
Rome1142.15
Salzburg1198.56
Santa Maria (Azores)171.94
Santiago450.67
Shannon244.40
Stuttgart997.19
Tenerife537.13
Toulouse — Blagnac850.50
Vienna1247.96
Zürich1123.01

Regulation 14

SCHEDULE 4

Steps to be taken to bring proposed application to court to the notice of interested persons and afford them an opportunity of becoming a party to the proceedings.

1.  The CAA, if it proposes to apply to the court for leave to sell an aircraft on behalf of Eurocontrol under these Regulations, shall take such of the following steps for bringing the proposed application to the notice of persons whose interests may be affected by the determination of the court thereon and for affording to any such person an opportunity of becoming a party to the proceedings on the application as are applicable to the aircraft—

(1) At least 21 days before applying to the court, the CAA shall publish—

(i)in the Edinburgh Gazette if the aircraft is detained in Scotland, or in the Belfast Gazette if the aircraft is detained in Northern Ireland, and in any case in the London Gazette; and

(ii)in one or more local newspapers circulating in the locality in which the aircraft is detained

such notice as is prescribed in paragraph 2 of this Schedule, and shall also, unless in that case it is impracticable to do so, serve such a notice, in the manner so prescribed, on each of the following persons:

(a)the person in whose name the aircraft is registered;

(b)the person, if any, who appears to the CAA to be the owner of the aircraft;

(c)any person who appears to the CAA to be the charterer of the aircraft whether or not by demise;

(d)any person who appears to the CAA to be the operator of the aircraft;

(e)any person who is registered as a mortgagee of the aircraft under an Order in Council made under section 86 of the Civil Aviation Act 1982 or who appears to the CAA to be a mortgagee of the aircraft under the law of any country other than the United Kingdom;

(f)any other person who appears to the CAA to have a proprietary interest in the aircraft.

(2) If any person who has been served with a notice in accordance with sub-paragraph (1) of this paragraph informs the CAA in writing within 14 days of the service of the notice of his desire to become a party to the proceedings the CAA shall make that person a defendant to the application.

Content and service of the notice under paragraph 1

2.—(1) A notice under paragraph 1 of this Schedule shall—

(a)state the nationality and registration marks of the aircraft;

(b)state the type of aircraft;

(c)state that by reason of default in the payment of a sum due to Eurocontrol for charges imposed by these Regulations, the CAA, on a date which shall be specified in the notice, detained the aircraft under these Regulations and, unless payment of the sum so due is made within a period of 56 days from the date when the detention began, or within 21 days of the date of service of the notice, whichever shall be the later, will apply to the court for leave to sell the aircraft;

(d)invite the person to whom the notice is given to inform the CAA within 14 days of the service of the notice if he wishes to become a party to the proceedings on the application.

(2) A notice under paragraph 1 of this Schedule shall be served —

(a)by delivering it to the person on whom it is to be served; or

(b)by leaving it at his usual or last known place of business or abode; or

(c)by sending it by post in a prepaid registered letter, or by the recorded delivery service, addressed to him at his usual or last known place of business or abode; or

(d)if the person to whom it is to be sent is an incorporated company or body, by delivering it to the secretary, clerk or other appropriate officer of the company or body at their registered or principal office, or sending it by post in a prepaid registered letter, or by the recorded delivery service, addressed to the secretary, clerk or officer of the company or body at that office.

(3) Any notice which is sent by post in accordance with the preceding paragraph to a place outside the United Kingdom shall be sent by air mail or by some other equally expeditious means.

Explanatory Note

(This note is not part of the Regulations)

These Regulations revoke and replace the Civil Aviation (Route Charges for Navigation Services) Regulations 1994, as amended.

New unit rates and transatlantic charges are introduced, reflecting forecasts of costs and traffic for 1996, and taking into account the balance of over and under recoveries of revenue as compared with costs experienced by the countries participating in the Eurocontrol charging system in 1994. The Czech Republic became a participating State in the Eurocontrol charging system from 1st January 1996 (regulations 6 and 7 and Schedule 2).

If the amount of the charge is not paid by the operator of the aircraft within 24 days of the date payment is demanded by Eurocontrol interest shall be paid from that day until the date when payment is made. The rate of interest is reduced from 9.25% to 8.69% (regulations 5(3) and (4)).

The unit rates in ECUs set out in Schedule 2 and the amount of the charges in ECUs set out in Schedule 3 (for transatlantic flights) are calculated by reference to the costs of provision of en-route navigation services in the participating countries in the Eurocontrol charges system, the amount of traffic using each country’s airspace and the relationship of each country’s currency to the ECU over a period agreed by Ministers of the participating countries. The interaction of these elements varies in each country. In calculating the revised charges the average of the exchange rates between the ECU and the currencies of the participating countries obtaining in the month of July 1995 have been used.

The unit rates for Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Slovenia and Switzerland have increased on average by 9.7%. The unit rates for Cyprus, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Portugal, Spain and Turkey have decreased on average by 7.7% and for Portugal (Santa Maria) by 34.3%. The unit rate for the United Kingdom has decreased by 1.1%.

The exemption for flights made between points within the specified airspace of Austria and the specified airspace of France is withdrawn (regulation 9).

Bahrain, Larnaca, Venice, Helsinki, Cologne— Bonn, Moscow, Warsaw, Luxembourg, Basle, Berlin, Hanover, Salzburg and Stuttgart have been added to certain zones in Schedule 3. Amman and Timisoara have been deleted from certain zones in Schedule 3.

The United Kingdom Air Pilot and the foreign Aeronautical Information Publications referred to in the Regulations can be purchased from the Civil Aviation Authority, Greville House, 37 Gratton Road, Cheltenham, Glos GL50 2BN and can be inspected at major aerodromes in the United Kingdom. The International Financial Statistics published by the International Monetary Fund and the Commission of the European Communities Official Journal (Information and Notices) can be inspected at the Civil Aviation Authority Central Library, Aviation House, South Area, Gatwick Airport, West Sussex RH6 0YR.

(1)

Cmnd. 8662.

(2)

1982 c. 16; section 73(1A) was added by section 1 of the Civil Aviation (Air Navigation Charges) Act 1989 (c. 9); “prescribed” is defined in section 105(1).

(3)

S.I. 1995/1970.

(4)

S.I. 1991/2437, to which there are amendments not relevant to these Regulations.