Estonia Among Six EU Nations Voting Against Flight Compensation Regulation
- EU countries agreed last week to increase the delay times before passengers can claim compensation for flight disruptions across Europe.
- This change follows 12 years of negotiations and aims to extend delay thresholds from three to four hours for short-haul and six hours for long-haul flights.
- The agreement also raises compensation for short-haul flights from €250 to €300 while reducing long-haul payouts from €600 to €500, sparking criticism from consumer groups and airlines alike.
- Consumer advocates argue the new thresholds will deny compensation to most passengers since most delays last between two and four hours, with Agustín Reyna calling it a “substantial rollback of key rights.”
- The reforms still need European Parliament approval and could cause confusion due to differing rules for UK and EU carriers, implying ongoing uncertainty for travelers’ rights and compensation.
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31 Articles
31 Articles
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Left
4
Center
2
Right
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Airlines have to financially compensate passengers for delayed flights. The reform of EU air passenger rights would make passengers worse. What passengers need to know now.
·Germany
Read Full ArticleThe European Union imposes stricter rules for airline passengers, and for those facing a delayed flight, there will be fewer losses.
·Romania
Read Full ArticleThe Council of Transports of the European Union has decided some modifications to the regulation 261/2002 on the air transport that modify the mechanisms of compensation making them more complicated.
·Milan, Italy
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Total News Sources31
Leaning Left4Leaning Right2Center2Last UpdatedBias Distribution50% Left
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources lean Left
50% Left
L 50%
C 25%
R 25%
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