Lufthansa raises fuel surcharges

02 Jul, 2005

Germany's Deutsche Lufthansa plans to raise fuel surcharges for its passengers to help compensate for continuing high oil prices, the airline said on Friday. On long-haul routes, the surcharge will rise to 37 euros ($44.71) per leg from 27 euros. On routes within Europe, the charge will rise to 9 euros from 7 euros, the carrier said.
The new charges will apply from July 8.
"The record price for oil is continuing to exert pressure on the airline's expenditure front," Lufthansa said in a statement.
The price of US light sweet crude oil reached an all-time high of $60.95 a barrel on Monday, though it eased to below $57 a barrel by the end of the week.
Lufthansa's decision to raise the charges comes a week after UK rivals British Airways and Virgin Atlantic Airways [VA.UL] announced they would increase their fuel surcharges from June 27 because of further oil price hikes.
BA's surcharge on long-haul tickets sold and issued in Britain rose to 24 pounds ($42.75) for each flight from 16 pounds, while the short-haul surcharge increased to 8 pounds from 6 pounds. Virgin Atlantic Airways, controlled by UK entrepreneur Richard Branson, raised its surcharge by 8 pounds per flight on all tickets sold in the UK.
Larger European competitor Air France KLM said on Tuesday it would make a decision on a possible surcharge increase within the next two weeks.

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