CELEX: 62001CC0363
Language: en
Date: 2003-01-28 00:00:00
Title: Opinion of Mr Advocate General Mischo delivered on 28 January 2003. # Flughafen Hannover-Langenhagen GmbH v Deutsche Lufthansa AG. # Reference for a preliminary ruling: Oberlandesgericht Frankfurt am Main - Germany. # Air transport - Access to the groundhandling market in Community airports - Directive 96/67/EC - Article 16 - Collection of a fee for access to airport installations - Conditions. # Case C-363/01.

OPINION OF ADVOCATE GENERALMISCHO delivered on 28 January 2003 (1)
         Case C-363/01 Flughafen Hannover-Langenhagen GmbHvDeutsche Lufthansa AG(Reference for a preliminary ruling from the Oberlandesgericht Frankfurt am Main (Germany))
            ((Air transport – Access to the groundhandling market in Community airports – Directive 96/67/EC – Article 16 – Collection of a fee for access to airport installations – Conditions))
            
      
         
      1.  An action has been raised before the Oberlandesgericht (Higher Regional Court) Frankfurt am Main by Flughafen Hannover-Langenhagen
      GmbH (hereinafter  
      the airport) against the airline company Deutsche Lufthansa AG (hereinafter  
      Lufthansa), the claimant having demanded payment from the defendant with effect from 1 January 1998 of a separate fee for access to
      the groundhandling market. The national court has referred a question on the validity of this claim under the applicable Community
      legislation.
       I ─ Community legislation
      
      2.  Recital 5 to the preamble of Council Directive 96/67/EC of 15 October 1996 on access to the groundhandling market at Community
      airports 
      
         			(2)
         		 (hereinafter  
      the Directive) states that  
      the opening-up of access to the groundhandling market should help reduce the operating costs of airline companies and improve
      the quality of service provided to airport users.
      
      3.  Recital 25 in the preamble to the Directive provides that:Whereas access to airport installations must be guaranteed to suppliers authorised to provide groundhandling services and
      to airport users authorised to self-handle, to the extent necessary for them to exercise their rights and to permit fair and
      genuine competition; whereas it must be possible however, for such access to give rise to the collection of a fee.
      
      4.  Under Article 16 of the Directive, headed  
      Access to installations: 
      1.  Member States shall take the necessary measures to ensure that suppliers of groundhandling services and airport users wishing
      to self-handle have access to airport installations to the extent necessary for them to carry out their activities. If the
      managing body of the airport or, where appropriate, the public authority or any other body which controls it places conditions
      upon such access, those conditions must be relevant, objective, transparent and non-discriminatory. 
      
      2.  The space available for groundhandling at an airport must be divided among the various suppliers of groundhandling services
      and self-handling airport users, including new entrants in the field, to the extent necessary for the exercise of their rights
      and to allow effective and fair competition, on the basis of the relevant, objective, transparent and non-discriminatory rules
      and criteria. 
      
      3.  Where access to airport installations gives rise to the collection of a fee, the latter shall be determined according to relevant,
      objective, transparent and non-discriminatory criteria.
      
      
      5.  When the Directive was adopted by the Council, the Commission arranged for a statement to be entered in the minutes relating
      to the application of Article 16(3), which reads as follows: The Commission states that Article 16(3) recognises an airport's right to collect a fee from suppliers of groundhandling services
      and self-handling users for access to its installations.The Commission states that such a fee may be construed as a commercial charge [German version:  
      Geschäftsgebühr] and may in particular contribute to the self-financing of the airport insofar as it is determined on the basis of relevant,
      objective, transparent and non-discriminatory criteria.
       II ─ The main proceedings
      
      6.  The order for reference shows that the claimant in the main proceedings is the operator of Hannover-Langenhagen airport. The
      defendant flies in and out of that airport and has for a considerable time provided check-in services on a self-handling basis
      for its passengers and ─ as a supplier to third parties of such services ─ for passengers of other airlines.
      
      7.  The airport made available check-in desks to Lufthansa in return for which it collected a rent determined in accordance with
      a contract for aircraft groundhandling. Until the end of 1997, the airport did not request payment from Lufthansa of a fee
      for access to the relevant market, at least not in the area of self-handling. On the other hand, it did require payment of
      such a fee from suppliers of groundhandling services for third parties and from other suppliers.
      
      8.  It is common ground between the parties that the fee in question, payment of which the airport seeks to recover from 1 January
      1998, is intended as separate remuneration for the grant of the opportunity to gain access to the market (right of access
      to a commercial opportunity) and not for any actual services rendered by the airport such as the provision of specific installations
      or installations used in common or other services, which are paid for by Lufthansa in any event.
      
      9.  As it found that the airport's right to payment of a fee of this kind depended on the interpretation of the Directive, the
      Oberlandesgericht Frankfurt am Main has referred the following questions to the Court for a preliminary ruling.
       III ─ Questions referred
       
      1.  Is Council Directive 96/67/EC of 15 October 1996 on access to the groundhandling market, in particular Article 16(3) thereof,
      in conjunction with Recital 25 in the preamble thereto, to be interpreted as meaning that the managing body of an airport
      within the meaning of Article 3 is entitled to demand from a self-handler and/or a supplier of groundhandling services to
      third parties payment of a separate licence fee for the grant of  
      access to airport installations in the sense of an access fee in return for the opening-up of a commercial opportunity in addition to a user fee (rental)
      payable by the self-handler or a supplier to third parties of groundhandling services for the rental under contract of airport
      installations, in this case, passenger check-in desks; or  alternatively, does Directive 96/67 merely provide that, for the purposes of determining a user fee, account is to be taken
      of the criteria mentioned in Article 16(3) and regard is to be had to the interest of the managing body of the airport in
      achieving a profit? 
      
      2.  If the answer to Question 1 ─ first alternative ─ is affirmative, does the airport operator also have the right to claim such
      a fee from the self-handler and/or supplier of handling services to third parties (supplier in the situation of the defendant
      in the main proceedings) in sectors where free access to the groundhandling market was already guaranteed prior to the entry
      into force of Directive 96/67, in particular in regard to land-side handling services? 
      
      3.  If Question 2 is answered affirmatively, is Directive 96/67 to be interpreted as entitling the managing body of an airport
      within the meaning of Article 3 also to demand payment of an additional licence fee as described in Question 1 for  
      access to airport services from a self-handler and/or a supplier of services in the situation of the defendant in the main proceedings who, until the
      entry into force of Directive 96/67 or provisions transposing it into national law, paid (only) rent for the use of the relevant
      airport installations? 
      
      4.  May it even be mandatory to demand (additionally) payment of a licence fee by a self-handler and/or supplier of groundhandling
      services who has hitherto enjoyed free access to that market, or, as the case may be, to the self-handling sector alone, without
      being required to pay an additional licence fee, in order to prevent unequal treatment in relation to other self-handlers
      and suppliers of groundhandling services 
      (a) who have already hitherto been requested to pay a supplementary licence fee in addition to a user fee; 
      
      (b) who are for the first time granted access to airport installations on the basis of the legal situation created by the Directive
      and are henceforth being requested to pay a licence fee for such access in addition to a further user fee for use of the installations?
      
      
      
      5.  If Article 16(3) of Directive 96/67 entitles an airport's managing body to require payment of a supplementary licence fee
      as described above, does a licence fee which is required to be paid in addition to a fee for use of check-in desks meet the
      requirements of Article 16(3) in regard to relevance, objectivity, transparency and non-discrimination where it is determined
      according to numbers of passengers (in this case DM 0.30 per passenger checked in)?
       VI ─ Analysis
      
      
      
      A ─
       The first question
      
      10.  It is necessary to start by defining the scope of the main proceedings clearly. The question at issue is whether the operator
      of an airport is entitled to collect a fee in return merely for the granting of access to the market for the provision of
      groundhandling services.
      
      11.  This access fee, which is described by the Commission and the national court as a concession charge and which the claimant
      in the main proceedings terms a  
      licence fee (
      Gestattungsentgelt), is payable solely in consideration of the airport operator giving the supplier of groundhandling services the opportunity
      of making a profit.
      
      12.  It can be distinguished from the various sums paid by providers of groundhandling services in exchange for the right to use
      certain infrastructures made available to them by the airport operator, such as check-in desks.
      
      13.  That type of fee is termed by the claimant in the main proceedings  
      Nutzungsentgelt (literally: user fee). It is not the subject of any challenge in the present case.
      
      14.  The debate relative to the validity of the claimant's claim in the main proceedings is focussed on the interpretation of Article 16(3)
      of the Directive. This is the only one of its provisions which refers to the payment of fees to an airport operator.
      
      15.  The terms of Article 16(3) of the Directive are clear. What gives rise to an entitlement to collect fees is  
      access to airport installations. The meaning of this provision is in my opinion entirely without ambiguity. An  
      installation is something tangible, consisting of the airport infrastructures; it does not comprise the essentially intangible opportunity
      of generating a profit which may flow from the use of those infrastructures.
      
      16.  I should make it clear in this regard that, as the Commission points out, referring in this context to the statement of reasons
      for the Proposal for the Directive, 
      
         			(3)
         		 that the concept of  
      access to airport installations includes access to general installations made available to the undertakings concerned. It follows that sums chargeable for
      access to installations are not limited to rents collected for premises and things made available to providers of groundhandling
      services and self-handlers, but also include costs incurred in providing, and setting up costs incurred in providing, general
      installations, such as certain cleaning and maintenance work and the issuing and checking of entry cards for the workforce
      of those undertakings.
      
      17.  Notwithstanding this, the airport, supported by the Hellenic Republic, claims that the notion of  
      access to installations within the meaning of Article 16(3) of the Directive, is truly directed to access to the market.
      
      18.  It is true that the airport does not challenge the distinction between a payment for access to a market and one for access
      to installations. However, it suggests that in using the latter term the Community legislature meant in fact to refer to the
      former. It raises in this regard a whole series of arguments in support of its interpretation of the wording of the Directive.
      
      19.  Those arguments are drawn, first, from considerations applying to the wording and the objective of and the background to the
      Directive, and, secondly, from various fundamental rights and principles.
      
      20.  As far as the  
       wording of the Directive   is concerned, it should be noted that in referring in Article 16(3) to airport installations, it is plainly directed at tangible
      objects and not an intangible opportunity for profit. Nevertheless, the claimant in the main proceedings claims to infer from
      the Opinion of Advocate General Jacobs in the  
       Bronner   case 
      
         			(4)
         		 that the concept of  
      installations in Community law includes that of the  
      market. It is however clear that the wording on which its argument is based 
      
         			(5)
         		 relates to access to a place, which could be an airport. Access to a place, which is something tangible, differs from access
      to a market, as is the case with the fee in question. As mentioned above, it is common ground between the parties that that
      fee is not payable in respect of access to a  
      place, but relates to access to an opportunity for profit.
      
      21.  It is therefore incorrect to conclude that, as the Opinion referred to above states, because access to a place may be essential
      to gain access to a market, in allowing payment to be made for access to a place, the Directive intended to allow a separate
      payment to be made for access to a market.
      
      22.  The Commission adds that it is clear from case-law that the concept of  
      remuneration presupposes the existence of some economic consideration. In the present case, this would consist in the making available
      of access to the  
      installations and their use. On the other hand, the decision to allow access to the market is an act of the legislature and not of the
      operator. It follows that it cannot be considered as the provision of consideration by the airport in return for which payment
      of remuneration would be due.
      
      23.  Nevertheless, this argument should not be held to be conclusive. The fact that it was a decision of the legislature to allow
      access to the market does not mean that it alone is entitled to determine the manner in which access to the market may be
      gained.
      
      24.  I find the following argument, also put forward by the Commission, more logically convincing. The Commission notes that Article 16(3)
      of the Directive requires that the amount of the remuneration be determined according to  
      relevant criteria. According to the Commission, it is therefore necessary for that remuneration to be linked to the costs incurred by the airport
      in making available those installations which it requires to provide to the providers of groundhandling services and to users
      wishing to self-handle.
      
      25.  It follows that the criterion of relevance would not be met in the case of a fee such as that in question in the main proceedings,
      which is based not on the costs incurred by the airport but on the opportunity for profit arising from access to the market
      for groundhandling services.
      
      26.  That analysis is in my opinion applicable in any event  
       mutatis mutandis  to the criterion of objectivity of the amount of the fee which Article 16(3) of the Directive also requires, and as the defendant
      in the main proceedings also points out. 
      
      27.  An opportunity for profit depends on a number of factors and in particular on the success and profitability of the supplier
      who gains access to the market. As a result, such a criterion could not, by definition, be objective in relation to the costs
      incurred by the airport which are not in any way dependent on factors specific to a particular supplier, but solely on considerations
      that can be defined as objective, namely the nature of the installations in question and the use that is made of them.
      
      28.  The interpretation provided by the wording of Article 16(3) of the Directive is supported by several of its other provisions.
      Mention may be made in this regard of Articles 6 and 7 of the Directive which refer to  
      free access by suppliers of groundhandling services to the market for the provision of groundhandling services to third parties and to  
      the freedom to self-handle. It would be difficult hold that access was  
      free, where in reality, if one adopts the airport's reasoning, it was dependent on the payment of an access fee to a potential
      competitor, namely the airport operator.
      
      29.  The difference between the terms used in Articles 6 and 7 of the Directive, which lay down the principle of free access to
      the market, and those of Article 16(3) of the Directive, which provide for the manner of payment for access to installations,
      confirms the position of the Commission and the defendant in the main proceedings, namely that it is only access to airport
      installations that may constitute the subject of the fee envisaged in the Directive, unlike access to the market itself, which
      the Directive aims to derestrict.
      
      30.  The defendant in the main proceedings was moreover correct to point out at the hearing that the interpretation of Article 16(3)
      proposed by the airport would also result in stripping Article 16(1) of any sense. The latter requires Member States to take
      the necessary measures to  
      ensure that suppliers of groundhandling services and airport users wishing to self-handle have access to airport installations
      to the extent necessary for them to carry out their activities. By definition, access to the market is necessary in order to carry out activities in that market. Article 16(1) of the Directive
      would thus have no real meaning if, as the airport argues, the phrase  
      access to airport installations should be understood as referring to access to the market.
      
      31.  That analysis is confirmed by the recital to the preamble which relates to this provision, namely the 25th. This emphasises
      the need to guarantee to the relevant undertakings  
      access to airport installations ... to the extent necessary for them to exercise their rights. These  
      rights could only consist of the right for those undertakings to offer their services, arising from the fact, as the recital states,
      that the providers in question are  
      authorised to carry out their activity. Those undertakings therefore have a right of access to the market which, having regard to the
      wording of the recital, implies the need for access to installations, which access may be subject to payment of a fee. There
      is no mention of such a possibility in the context of the right of access to the market.
      
      32.  The interpretation based on the wording of Article 16(3) of the Directive is in my opinion confirmed by an analysis of the
       
       objective of the Directive. 
      
      33.  According to the airport, the principal objective of the Directive is, as indeed its name implies, access to the market. By
      contrast, the Directive does not seek to regulate rent paid for the use of things located at the airport, contrary to the
      interpretation supported both by the Commission and Lufthansa. The claimant in the main proceedings points out in this regard
      that Article 295 EC states that the rules governing the system of property ownership are a matter for the Member States. Moreover,
      to interpret the Directive as meaning that it was intended to regulate rent paid for airport installations would be contrary
      to the principle of subsidiarity laid down in Article 5 EC.
      
      34.  I agree entirely with the airport's analysis of the nature of the objective of the Directive. The second recital emphasises
      at the outset that the objective of the elimination of the restrictions on freedom to provide services in the Community should
      be achieved within the framework of the common transport policy. Furthermore, the fifth recital of the Directive justifies
      the opening-up of access to the groundhandling market by stating that this should help reduce the operating costs of airline
      companies and improve the quality of services provided to airport users.
      
      35.  If there is thus no doubt that the airport is correct to emphasise that the objective of the Directive is the opening-up of
      the market for groundhandling services, does it follow that it is right to draw the conclusions from that which the airport
      proposes? I do not think so.
      
      36.  The fact that the objective of the Directive is the opening-up of the market and not the regulation of rents does not in any
      way mean that the question of access to installations may not properly fall within its scope. On the contrary, in a case such
      as the present one, where it is common ground that access to the market is not possible without access to the installations
      themselves, it is entirely to be expected that a directive whose aim is the opening-up of the market would include a provision
      relating to a condition precedent to that opening-up, namely access to the relevant installations.
      
      37.  Such a case, which may be seen as comparable to the situation in which the doctrine of  
      essential facilities falls to be applied and to which the claimant in the main proceedings itself refers, is not at all unusual in Community law.
      Examples drawn both from the practice of the Commission 
      
         			(6)
         		 and from case-law 
      
         			(7)
         		 as well as from legislation in areas such as telecommunications, 
      
         			(8)
         		 energy, 
      
         			(9)
         		 and transport 
      
         			(10)
         		 show that it may often be necessary to regulate access to infrastructures in order to create real opportunities for access
      to the market.
      
      38.  It could not be said that in so doing, the Community measures in question necessarily exceeded the competence of the Community
      by affecting property law in the Member States, without at the same time giving that rule such an overriding importance that
      the realisation by the Community of its task of achieving the internal market would become impossible.
      
      39.  Moreover, it should also be pointed out that the interpretation of the Directive proposed by the claimant in the main proceedings,
      in terms of which the right to restrict access to the market would be justified by the Directive in rendering it subject to
      a fee, is logically difficult to assimilate with the objective of opening up the market. Thus, in the present case, where
      certain operators were paying no fee for access to the market prior to the Directive coming into force, the effect of its
      doing so would, according to the airport, be to allow the creation of a new impediment to access to the market, which the
      Directive is nevertheless supposed to promote.
      
      40.  Admittedly, it is true, as the airport points out, that the fact that Lufthansa benefited from a privilege before the coming
      into force of the Directive in no way gives it the right to that advantage in perpetuity. It none the less remains the case
      that it is paradoxical to interpret a directive intended to promote freedom as meaning that existing obstacles should be extended
      to those who were previously not affected by them, rather than abolished for all operators concerned.
      
      41.  The same is all the more the case where, as the fifth recital to the Directive states, the opening-up of the market  
      should help reduce the operating costs of airline companies. It is beyond doubt that if the Directive were read as meaning that access to the market in this way could be made subject
      to payment by those companies, or by the suppliers of services used by them, of a specific fee, payable in addition to the
      user fees otherwise payable, the objective of reducing costs would be jeopardised.
      
      42.  The claimant in the main proceedings also relies on the scheme of the Directive to support its interpretation. It claims that
      the Directive instituted a comprehensive scheme of regulation intended to achieve an overall balancing of all interests in
      question, namely on the one hand those of the airports and on the other those of the suppliers of groundhandling services.
      
      43.  It is in that context that the fee for access to the market should be seen. Its aim would be to compensate airports not only
      for their permitting the carrying out of the specific activities for which it is to be paid, but also for all the expenses
      imposed on airports by the Directive.
      
      44.  The fee for access to the market contributes to the self-financing of airports and thus to realising the objective of their
      efficient operation. All of this would be compromised if operators were allowed to avoid payment of this fee and thereby deprive
      the airport of a source of funding. That loss could not be compensated for by an increase in rents, because the requirement
      of transparency imposed by the Directive imposes a strict separation between fees for access to the market and rents, as the
      latter must be apportioned to the airport services to which they relate.
      
      45.  Furthermore, to compensate for the loss of the access fee by increasing rents would mean requiring all tenants to pay for
      those suppliers of services who carried out their activities using access to the airport installations while at the same time
      renting nothing within the airport precincts.
      
      46.  The arguments of the defendant in the main proceedings should therefore be rejected as they would involve, contrary to the
      intention of the Community legislature, accepting only those provisions of the Directive which gave it access to the market,
      while ignoring those relating to the counterpart of this access, namely payment.
      
      47.  The fact remains, however, that the terms of the Directive do not support the analysis of the claimant in the main proceedings.
      At no point does the Directive refer to the self-financing of airports. The concept of overall compensation, referred to by
      the airport is not mentioned either. On the contrary, it is apparent from Recital 9 of the preamble to the Directive that
      the legislature took the view that free access to the groundhandling market is compatible with the efficient operation of
      Community airports. That statement by the legislature is not qualified by reference to any condition. This clearly shows that
      it did not consider that the opening-up of access to the market was liable to cause harm to the financial position of airports.
      
      48.  The wording of the Directive makes it entirely clear that the intention of the legislature was to open up access to the market
      to the maximum possible extent, while strictly limiting exceptions to this. 
      
         			(11)
         		 Those exceptions are based 
      
         			(12)
         		 on safety, security, capacity and available-space constraints. By contrast, there is no reference to the financing requirements
      of airports, and the Directive does not mention these in the context of access fees, which are, it should be emphasised, optional
      in any event.
      
      49.  It necessarily follows that the legislature did not intend to adopt the line of reasoning put forward by the claimant in the
      main proceedings, who suggests that the opening-up of access to the market is a burden imposed on airports, for which they
      would have the right to be compensated by the suppliers of groundhandling services.
      
      50.  As for the question of whether the legislature had the right to act in this manner, this is a point which will be considered
      in the context of the protection of fundamental rights.
      
      51.  The arguments of the claimant in the main proceedings therefore fall to be rejected on this point.
      
      52.  The claimant also considers that the  
       historical background   to the Directive supports its interpretation. It notes first of all that the initial Proposal put forward by the Commission
      on 10 April 1995 
      
         			(13)
         		 contemplated a fee to cover the cost of making the infrastructures necessary for the provision of groundhandling services
      available. Neither the new Proposal presented by the Commission on 12 March 1996 
      
         			(14)
         		 nor the Directive in the form in which it was ultimately adopted referred to this basis for recovery of costs. On the contrary,
      it follows from the statement entered at the instance of the Commission in the minutes of the proceedings adopting the Directive
      by the Council, referred to a paragraph 5 of this Opinion, that the fee referred to at Article 16(3) of the Directive was
      intended to form an independent source of self-financing for airports and to guarantee their efficient operation.
      
      53.  Secondly, the airport refers to the fact that the Parliament had adopted an amendment to the Commission's initial Proposal
      relating to the issue of payment. This amendment included the following particular provisions: 
      3.  Access to and shared use of airport installations for suppliers of groundhandling services and users wishing to self-handle
      may give rise to the collection of a fee as a charge for the costs which this access and the provision of the necessary infrastructure
      occasions for the airport and reflecting the level of the costs ... A fee may also be charged for access by third parties to the commercial opportunities created by the airport undertaking ...
      . 
      
      54.  According to the claimant in the main proceedings, the Commission and the Council accepted this amendment, and the Directive
      should therefore be interpreted as allowing for the collection of a fee for access to the market.
      
      55.  I do not agree with this analysis. The final text of the Directive shows no trace of the second subparagraph of paragraph 3
      referred to above, on which the applicant relies, and the documents referred to by the airport suggest no intention on the
      part of the Commission or the Council to retain the amendment in question.
      
      56.  It should also be emphasised that that proposal for amendment made a very clear distinction, as is shown by the use of the
      word  
      also, between the collection of a fee for  
      access to airport installations and a fee which  
      may be charged for access by third parties to the commercial opportunities created by the airport undertaking. The latter is plainly a fee for access to the market. It follows that the fee for  
      access to airport installations referred to in the first subparagraph of the amendment proposed by the Parliament related to another matter. That could only
      be access to a specific infrastructure. Yet it was the expression  
      access to airport installations that was retained in the final text of the Directive. It is hardly likely that the same terms would have completely changed
      in meaning during the course of the same legislative procedure.
      
      57.  As regards the Commission's declaration, the fact remains that it is hardly explicit. In particular, the reference to the
      self-financing of airports gives no indication of the nature of the fee, as its collection would contribute to that self-financing
      in both the scenarios at issue in this case.
      
      58.  The inevitable conclusion therefore is that an examination of the background to the Directive does not substantiate the interpretation
      suggested by the claimant in the main proceedings.
      
      59.  The latter also refers to Decision 98/513/EC 
      
         			(15)
         		 and case-law concerning it. 
      
         			(16)
         		 However, both the Commission and Lufthansa rightly observe that this decision concerned the law as in force prior to the
      adoption of the Directive and did not relate to the question of the nature of the fee collected by the airport operator but
      instead to the applicability of Article 86 of the EC Treaty (now Article 82 EC) on differences in treatment by the airport
      of suppliers of services.
      
      60.  The claimant in the main proceedings adds lastly that the interpretation put forward by it is the only one capable of guaranteeing
      the  
       respect of the fundamental principles of Community law.   
      
      61.  It refers first of all to the  
       principle of non-discrimination   set out in Article 12 EC and notes in that regard that this prohibits any direct or indirect discrimination on grounds of
      nationality being made by airports in fixing fees collected by them.
      
      62.  Airports would be encouraged to set different rates for self-handling users and suppliers of services such as Lufthansa, who
      pay no fee for access to the market, on the one hand, and for suppliers of services who have always paid a fee of this kind,
      on the other. It would follow that airports would be bound to discriminate between national airline companies and those of
      other Member States. Self-handling at all the airports of another Member State served by it would rarely be profitable for
      an airline company. The result would for a small company be that it would require to have groundhandling services provided
      by a third party and in the final analysis to reimburse the fee for access to the market paid by that third party to the airport.
      On the other hand, in airports located in the Member State in which it was established, a national airline would by definition
      generate a sufficient volume of traffic to justify using self-handling and would thus be free of the requirement to pay a
      fee for access to the market.
      
      63.  Moreover, and in the same way, there would be discrimination in that large airline companies would benefit in relation to
      small ones. As the former could check in their own passengers, they would not require to pay a fee for access to the market,
      while the latter, for whom it would not be profitable to check in their own passengers, would have to use suppliers of groundhandling
      services who would require to continue to pay the airports the fee for access to the market that they have always being paying.
      
      64.  It must be stated that the whole of this reasoning is based on a fundamentally false premiss. The question in the present
      case is not whether the claimant in the main proceedings is obliged to require payment of a fee for access to the market by
      Lufthansa in order to place it on an equal footing with all the other operators from whom such a payment is apparently demanded.
      The question put by the national court is whether, after the coming into force of the Directive, the airport is entitled to
      demand from any party, be it a supplier of services or a user wishing to self-handle, payment of a fee for access to the market.
      
      65.  It is thus not a question of whether some users may be required to pay a fee while others are not, but whether a fee is acceptable
      as a matter of principle. If, as I believe, that is not the case, no operator would be charged a fee.
      
      66.  The claimant in the main proceedings relies secondly on  
       the right to property.   It argues that this includes not only the right to reimbursement of expenses, but also the opportunity to realise a benefit
      by making use of assets owned. Were this right to be removed, the owner would be entitled to compensation. It follows that
      to interpret the Directive so as to accord with the fundamental right of the protection of property would require that it
      be read as preventing airports from being deprived of or restrained in the manner in which they exercise their property rights
      for the benefit of suppliers of groundhandling services, or as allowing the payment of reasonable compensation to airports.
      
      67.  According to the airport, that was the solution chosen by the legislature by allowing the restriction on airports' rights
      to property to be compensated for by the payment of a fee for access to the market.
      
      68.  I should state at the outset that I do not consider that the fundamental right to property requires that the Directive be
      read in this way.
      
      69.  It does not follow from the Directive that airports are be treated as being deprived of their property rights because they
      would lose the opportunity to achieve a profit in making use of their assets. It should be emphasised in this regard that
      the fact that airports are not entitled to collect a fee for access to the market in no way means that they are required to
      waive their right to make a profit on the economic services they provide.
      
      70.  It should be borne in mind in this regard that the Directive requires only that the fees collected should be determined according
      to  
      relevant, objective, transparent and non-discriminatory criteria. None of these terms prohibits airports setting user fees in precisely the same manner as any undertaking which makes infrastructure
      available, having regard not only to the costs of its installation and upkeep, but also to a reasonable profit margin.
      
      71.  In that context, I am of the view that there is no doubt that this fee could take into account factors such as the number
      of passengers or turnover.
      
      72.  I should also add that this line of argument based on the requirement to offer compensation to the operator of an infrastructure
      on the ground that the operator provides access to a market seems to me in the present case to minimise the importance of
      the relationship of interdependency which exists between the airport and the airline companies. They jointly offer a service
      to passengers, without which neither the airport nor the companies could prosper. Both the companies and the airport supply
      elements of the service provided to passengers. 
      
      73.  Lastly, the claimant in the main proceedings referred at the hearing to  
       the fundamental principle of free trade.   It states in that regard that the freedom to determine prices is the counterpart of this principle. It would follow that an
      exception to that freedom should be strictly construed and should be expressly mentioned in the Directive.
      
      74.  I would observe in this regard that in stating that any fee for access to airport installations should be  
      determined according to relevant, objective, transparent and non-discriminatory criteria, the Directive does not unduly restrict the right of managing bodies of airports to determine the prices they charge.
      
      75.  The principle of the freedom to determine prices does not mean that access to the market should be separately remunerated
      from access to installations made use of.
      
      76.  It is enough that the right of access to installations should be remunerated at a fair value, that is to say that it allows
      for the depreciation of the installations and costs of management and that it provides airports with a reasonable level of
      profit.
      
      77.  In light of the foregoing, I propose to answer the first question as follows:Council Directive 96/67/EC of 15 October 1996 ─ and in particular Article 16(3) read in conjunction with Recital 25 in the
      preamble thereto ─ should be interpreted as meaning that the managing body of an airport within the meaning of Article 3 is
      not entitled to demand from a self-handler and/or a supplier of handling services payment of a separate licence fee for the
      grant of  
      access to airport installations in the sense of an access fee for the opening-up of a commercial opportunity. On the other hand, the managing body of an
      airport is entitled to collect a fee for the use of airport installations, the amount of which is to be determined in accordance
      with the criteria laid down under Article 16(3) of the said Directive and having regard to the interest of the managing body
      of the airport in achieving a profit.
      
      
      
      B ─
       The second, third, fourth and fifth questions
      
      78.  These questions address the procedures for collection of a possible fee for access to the market, and therefore arise only
      in the event that the answer to the first question were that the collection of a fee of that kind was acceptable in principle.
      I have explained above why I am of the opinion that the Directive does not allow a fee to be charged for access to the market.
      It follows that there is no need to answer these questions.
        V ─ Conclusion
      
      79.  For the foregoing reasons, I propose to answer the questions referred by the Oberlandesgericht Frankfurt am Main in the following
      terms:Council Directive 96/67/EC of 15 October 1996 ─ and in particular Article 16(3) read in conjunction with Recital 25 in the
      preamble thereto ─ should be interpreted as meaning that the managing body of an airport within the meaning of Article 3 is
      not entitled to demand from a self-handler and/or a supplier of handling services payment of a separate licence fee for the
      grant of  
      access to airport installations in the sense of an access fee for the opening-up of a commercial opportunity. On the other hand, the managing body of an airport is entitled to collect a fee for the use of airport installations, the
      amount of which is to be determined in accordance with the criteria laid down under Article 16(3) of the said Directive and
      having regard to the interest of the managing body of the airport in making a profit. 
      
       1 –
         
           Original language: French.
      
      2 –
         
         OJ 1996 L 272, p. 36.
      
      3 –
         
         Proposal for a Council Directive on access to the groundhandling market at Community airports (OJ 1995 C 142, p. 7).
      
      4 –
         
         Case C-7/97 [1998] ECR I-7791.
      
      5 –
         
         An essential facility can be a product such as a raw material or a service, including provision of access to a place such
            as a harbour or airport ... (paragraph 50 of that Opinion).
         
      
      6 –
         
         Commission Decision 94/19/EC of 21 December 1993 relating to a proceeding pursuant to Article 86 of the EC Treaty (IV/34.689
            ─  
             Sea Containers   v  
             Stena Sealink   ─ Interim measures) (OJ 1994 L 15, p. 8).
         
      
      7 –
         
         See the  
             Bronner   judgment, cited above.
         
      
      8 –
         
         Commission Directive 90/388/EEC of 28 June 1990 on competition in the markets for telecommunications services (OJ 1990 L 192,
            p. 10).
         
      
      9 –
         
         European Parliament and Council Directive 96/92/EC of 19 December 1996 concerning common rules for the internal market on
            electricity (OJ 1997 L 27, p. 20).
         
      
      10 –
         
         Council Regulation (EEC) No 95/93 of 18 January 1993 on common rules for the allocation of slots at Community airports (OJ 1993
            L 14, p. 1).
         
      
      11 –
         
         See Articles 6(2), 7(2), and 9. 
      
      12 –
         
         See the 11th and 14th recitals. 
      
      13 –
         
         Cited above.
      
      14 –
         
         Amended proposal for a Council Directive on access to the groundhandling market at Community airports (OJ 1996 C 124, p. 19).
      
      15 –
         
         Commission Decision of 11 June 1998 relating to a proceeding under Article 86 of the EC Treaty (IV/35.613 ─ Alpha Flight Services/Aéroports
            de Paris) (OJ 1998 L 230 p. 10).
         
      
      16 –
         
         Case T-128/98  
             Aéroports de Paris   v  
             Commission   [2000] ECR II-3929.