OTTAWA: Canadian officials have been working for months to lower what they have called “excessive” fees levied on the country’s aerospace exports to Europe, but have had a hard time getting cooperation from their European counterparts.
The dispute over fees charged by the European Aviation Safety Agency to certify Canadian aircraft and parts goes back to at least the end of last year, according to a briefing note obtained by The Hill Times.
The note, prepared for a meeting between an unidentified official in Global Affairs Canada and Jean-Luc Demarty, the European Commission’s director-general for trade, in December of last year show that Canada was “concerned over the excessive fees” charged by the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) to validate Canadian aircraft and parts that had already been approved as safe by Transport Canada. It also said that Canadian officials had raised the matter with their EU counterparts “on a number of occasions,” but “to date, the EU has been unwilling to engage to help us progress on this file.”
Officials at Transport Canada had also reached out to their counterparts in EASA, but as of that time had been “unable to secure a meeting” to discuss setting up a working group to address the issue, the note said. As of earlier this month, the fees levied by EASA “remain higher than those of other regulators, and Transport Canada and Global Affairs are both aware of industry’s concerns,” according to a written statement from Kristen VanderHoek, a spokesperson for the Aerospace Industries Association of Canada.
The association is still working with Canada’s government and “our international partners” to lower EASA fees on Canadian products, said the emailed statement.
Like Transport Canada, EASA is responsible for certifying as safe aircraft that will be used within its jurisdiction, and charges fees to the companies that own the aircraft and parts being certified.
Transport Canada has “conveyed to Europe Canada’s industry’s concerns with the fees they charged, and they have expressed a willingness to discuss this in more details,” wrote spokesperson Pierre Manoni in an emailed statement. “Out of respect to Transport Canada’s counterparts, it would be premature to further discuss the parameters of these discussions.”
“Transport Canada respects Europe’s authority to set fees that are commensurate with the services they offer, but does not resist the opportunity to question them when they do not align with our views,” read the statement.
Canada and the EU have a Bilateral Aviation Safety Agreement “that symbolizes reciprocal acceptance of each side’s certification process and competence,” according to the statement. Transport Canada and its EU counterparts have been meeting to “finalize the streamlining of our respective procedures” which could lessen the work for EASA when certifying Canadian products, and in turn lower EASA’s fees, said the statement from Transport Canada.
While the December 2016 briefing note said that Transport Canada had been unable to get a meeting with EASA on the issue, the statement from Mr. Manoni said that “Transport Canada’s European counterparts have never declined a meeting outright on any subject.
Global Affairs Canada said that the government “remains mindful of industry concerns” over the EASA fees for products already certified by Transport Canada, and “continues to engage with European Union authorities on this important subject,” wrote spokesperson Natasha Nystrom in an emailed statement.