EU Plans to Extend Carbon Levies to Foreign Flights, Hitting Airline Margins
easyJet operates a network similar to Ryanair, dominated by intra-EU short-haul flights. Its direct exposure to foreign-flight levies is small, largely limited to UK–EU routes post-Brexit. Still, broad carbon price increases and potential future UK reciprocation add uncertainty.
- ▼ EU carbon levy expansion could raise system-wide carbon costs
- ▼ UK–EU routes now classified as ‘foreign flights’ for ETS purposes
- ▲ easyJet’s fleet efficiency and low unit costs help mitigate permit price rises
- ▲ The UK might mirror the EU policy, increasing costs further
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How exposed is easyJet compared to full-service carriers?
easyJet has far less exposure. Its model is almost entirely point-to-point within Europe, with only a handful of intercontinental routes. The direct new levy applies to a small slice of its network.
Could UK–EU routes become more expensive?
Yes. Post-Brexit, flights between the UK and the EU are treated as foreign flights by both jurisdictions. Expanding the levy would likely increase costs on these popular city pairs, potentially hitting demand.