|
|
|
|
|
by jodrellblank
1829 days ago
|
|
In Europe, 60% of airports are government owned: https://simpleflying.com/how-airports-make-money/ From that page, Heathrow makes half its money from passengers from operating a train line into the city, car rentals, restaurants, retail, parking, VIP lounges.
Is that saying, if you couldn't extract money from a captive audience for how inconvenient the airport is, it wouldn't make enough to cover its own running costs? Surely, trains need less infrastructure than cars - a road to every building in the country? Government pays for this, of course. https://greennews.ie/eu-airlines-propped-up-subsidies/ claims that small European airports are not profitable, and are propped up by government subsidies, which RyanAir uses to undercut competitor rates, and they essentially act as a subsidy to RyanAir. Jet fuel is not taxed in the EU (same link), but diesel train fuel is taxed in the UK ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrocarbon_Oil_Duty#Trains ). |
|
Trains need that too. It can be a road from the train station to the building, or it can be tracks. However in the end every building sometimes need something delivered.
Maybe the trains allows you to downgrade the road to gravel, but trains still need the road network for that last mile.