Directive 1996/67 - Access to the groundhandling market at Community airports

Please note

This page contains a limited version of this dossier in the EU Monitor.

1.

Current status

This directive has been published on October 25, 1996, entered into force on November 14, 1996 and should have been implemented in national regulation on October 25, 1997 at the latest.

2.

Key information

official title

Council Directive 96/67/EC of 15 October 1996 on access to the groundhandling market at Community airports
 
Legal instrument Directive
Number legal act Directive 1996/67
Original proposal COM(1994)590 EN
CELEX number i 31996L0067

3.

Key dates

Document 15-10-1996
Publication in Official Journal 25-10-1996; Special edition in Croatian: Chapter 07 Volume 026,Special edition in Czech: Chapter 07 Volume 002,Special edition in Polish: Chapter 07 Volume 002,Special edition in Slovenian: Chapter 07 Volume 002,Special edition in Romanian: Chapter 07 Volume 004,OJ L 272, 25.10.1996,Special edition in Slovak: Chapter 07 Volume 002,Special edition in Maltese: Chapter 07 Volume 002,Special edition in Lithuanian: Chapter 07 Volume 002,Special edition in Hungarian: Chapter 07 Volume 002,Special edition in Estonian: Chapter 07 Volume 002,Special edition in Latvian: Chapter 07 Volume 002,Special edition in Bulgarian: Chapter 07 Volume 004
Effect 14-11-1996; Entry into force Date pub. + 20 See Art 24
End of validity 31-12-9999
Transposition 25-10-1997; At the latest See Art 23

4.

Legislative text

Avis juridique important

|

5.

31996L0067

Council Directive 96/67/EC of 15 October 1996 on access to the groundhandling market at Community airports

Official Journal L 272 , 25/10/1996 P. 0036 - 0045

COUNCIL DIRECTIVE 96/67/EC of 15 October 1996 on access to the groundhandling market at Community airports

THE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,

Having regard to the Treaty establishing the European Community, and in particular Article 84 (2) thereof,

Having regard to the proposal from the Commission (1),

Having regard to the opinion of the Economic and Social Committee (2),

Acting in accordance with the procedure laid down in Article 189c of the Treaty (3),

  • (1) 
    Whereas the Community has gradually introduced a common air transport policy with the aim of completing the internal market in accordance with Article 7a of the Treaty as a lasting contribution to promoting economic and social progress;
  • (2) 
    Whereas the objective of Article 59 of the Treaty is to eliminate the restrictions on freedom to provide services in the Community; whereas, in accordance with Article 61 of the Treaty, that objective must be achieved within the framework of the common transport policy;
  • (3) 
    Whereas through Council Regulations (EEC) No 2407/92 (4), (EEC) No 2408/92 (5) and (EEC) No 2409/92 (6) that objective has been attained with regard to air transport services as such;
  • (4) 
    Whereas groundhandling services are essential to the proper functioning of air transport; whereas they make an essential contribution to the efficient use of air transport infrastructure;
  • (5) 
    Whereas the opening-up of access to the groundhandling market should help reduce the operating costs of airline companies and improve the quality of service provided to airport users;
  • (6) 
    Whereas in the light of the principle of subsidiarity it is essential that access to the groundhandling market should take place within a Community framework, while allowing Member States the possibility of taking into consideration the specific nature of the sector;
  • (7) 
    Whereas in its communication of June 1994 entitled 'The way forward for civil aviation in Europe` the Commission indicated its intention of taking an initiative before the end of 1994 in order to achieve access to the groundhandling market at Community airports; whereas the Council, in its resolution of 24 October 1994 on the situation in European civil aviation (7), confirmed the need to take account of the imperatives linked to the situation of airports when opening up the market;
  • (8) 
    Whereas, in its resolution of 14 February 1995 on European civil aviation (8), the European Parliament repeated its concern that account should be taken of the impact of access to the groundhandling market on employment and safety conditions at Community airports;
  • (9) 
    Whereas free access to the groundhandling market is consistent with the efficient operation of Community airports;
  • (10) 
    Whereas free access to the groundhandling market must be introduced gradually and be adapted to the requirements of the sector;
  • (11) 
    Whereas for certain categories of groundhandling services access to the market and self-handling may come up against safety, security, capacity and available-space constraints; whereas it is therefore necessary to be able to limit the number of authorized suppliers of such categories of groundhandling services; whereas it should also be possible to limit self-handling; whereas, in that case, the criteria for limitation must be relevant, objective, transparent and non-discriminatory;
  • (12) 
    Whereas if the number of suppliers of groundhandling services is limited effective competition will require that at least one of the suppliers should ultimately be independent of both the managing body of the airport and the dominant carrier;
  • (13) 
    Whereas if...

More

This text has been adopted from EUR-Lex.

6.

Original proposal

 

7.

Sources and disclaimer

For further information you may want to consult the following sources that have been used to compile this dossier:

This dossier is compiled each night drawing from aforementioned sources through automated processes. We have invested a great deal in optimising the programming underlying these processes. However, we cannot guarantee the sources we draw our information from nor the resulting dossier are without fault.

 

8.

Full version

This page is also available in a full version containing the summary of legislation, de geconsolideerde versie, the legal context, de Europese rechtsgrond, other dossiers related to the dossier at hand, the related cases of the European Court of Justice and finally consultations relevant to the dossier at hand.

The full version is available for registered users of the EU Monitor by ANP and PDC Informatie Architectuur.

9.

EU Monitor

The EU Monitor enables its users to keep track of the European process of lawmaking, focusing on the relevant dossiers. It automatically signals developments in your chosen topics of interest. Apologies to unregistered users, we can no longer add new users.This service will discontinue in the near future.