KLM cuts nearly 1% of unprofitable European flights

Dutch airline KLM announced on Thursday the cancellation of nearly 1% of its European flights over the coming month due to rising kerosene costs. It will offer 80 fewer round trips from its Schiphol base in Amsterdam. KLM justified the move by the financial unviability of these routes while denying any fuel shortage.

Air France-KLM subsidiary KLM stated in a press release that it will reduce its European operations by less than 1%, impacting a limited number of intra-European flights.

"This concerns a limited number of flights within Europe which, due to the rise in kerosene costs, are no longer financially viable," the company explained. It specified there is "no kerosene shortage".

Separately, KLM deplored the Netherlands' announcement of a 2027 increase in the air ticket tax, which will be "more than eight times higher" than the European average. The tax stays at 30 euros for flights under 2000 km, but rises to 48 euros for medium-haul and 72 euros for long-haul. The airline warns that heavier taxation than in neighboring countries could push travelers to other airports.

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Illustration depicting chaos at a French airport with canceled flights, rising airfares, and stranded tourists due to Middle East war fuel costs.
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Airline SAS is canceling a couple of hundred flights in March and at least 1,000 in April due to sharply increased fuel prices. The company cites a doubling of fuel costs in ten days amid the Middle East war. Norwegian pilot unions question the explanation, pointing to staffing issues.

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The European Commission, led by Ursula von der Leyen, proposes reducing electricity taxes, reviewing the carbon emissions market, and avoiding premature nuclear plant closures to lower energy prices amid the Middle East war. These measures address surging oil prices due to the Strait of Hormuz closure, costing 6 billion euros since February 28. The EU meanwhile rejects military involvement in the conflict despite pressure from Donald Trump.

 

 

 

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