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US Airlines To Take The Netherlands To Court If Capacity Cap Is Applied At Amsterdam Schiphol Airport

US airline trade association Airlines for America (A4A) has warned Amsterdam Schiphol Airport (AMS) it will take legal action if the airport goes ahead with planned flight reductions. The airport is looking to cut over 4% of flight movements as it tackles noise pollution, but US airlines have said they will contest the flight cap in court, arguing that the ‘Balanced Approach’ ethos has not been met sufficiently by the airport.

In a letter addressed to Dutch Infrastructure Minister Barry Madlener and seen by De Telegraaf, A4A said that Schiphol’s plan to cut flights from 500,000 to 478,000 per year was in breach of EU and international regulations. With the cuts due to impact this year’s winter schedule starting in October, a firm decision on whether or not the flight cap will go ahead must be finalized by May 8th for scheduling reasons.

Delta Air Lines Airbus A350-900 departing Amsterdam Schiphol Airport AMS shutterstock_2466444049
Photo: Minh K Tran | Shutterstock

The government is expected to finalize the decision soon, much to the chagrin of US airlines, which stand to lose out on valuable slots. A4A has pointed to the airport’s failures to adopt the EU-backed Balanced Approach, an ethos that looks to tackle noise pollution while minimizing operational impact.

In December, the Dutch government announced that Amsterdam Schiphol would handle 22,000 fewer flights this year, a move that would reduce noise pollution by 15%. This was a compromise on a previous proposal to cut 50,000 flights that was eventually pulled after heavy industry lobbying.

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