
1 
These Regulations may be cited as the Civil Aviation (Route Charges for Navigation Services) Regulations 1989 and shall come into force on 1st April 1989.
2 
The Regulations specified in Schedule 1 hereto are hereby revoked.
3 

(1) In these Regulations—
 “AIP” in relation to a country other than the United Kingdom means a document in force at the date of the making of these Regulations, entitled “Aeronautical Information Publication” or “AIP” and published by a public authority of that country;
 “Authorised person” means any constable or any person authorised by the CAA (whether by name or by class or description) either generally or in relation to a particular case or class of cases;
 “The CAA” means the Civil Aviation Authority;
 “FIR” means “Flight Information Region”;
 “The Organisation” means the European Organisation for the Safety of Air Navigation known as Eurocontrol;
 “Specified airspace” means the airspace of a FIR described as set forth in columns 1 and 2 of Schedule 2 hereto;
 “United Kingdom Air Pilot” means a document so entitled in force at the date of the making of these Regulations and published by the CAA.
(2) Expressions used in these Regulations shall, unless the context otherwise requires, have the same respective meanings as in the Air Navigation Order 1985.
4 

(1) Subject to the provisions of these Regulations the operator of any aircraft (in whatsoever State it is registered) for which navigation services (not being navigation services provided in connection with the use of an aerodrome) are made available in a specified airspace shall pay to the Organisation, in respect of each flight by that aircraft in that airspace, a charge for those services (hereinafter referred to as “the charge”) at the appropriate rate calculated in accordance with regulation 6 or 7 of these Regulations, whichever shall apply in the circumstances.
(2) If the Organisation is unable, after taking reasonable steps, to ascertain who is the operator, it may give notice to the owner of the aircraft that it will treat him as the operator until he establishes to the reasonable satisfaction of the Organisation that some other person is the operator; and from the time when the notice is given the Organisation shall be entitled, for so long as the owner is unable to establish as aforesaid that some other person is the operator, to treat the owner as if he were the operator, and for that purpose the provisions of these Regulations (other than this paragraph) shall apply to the owner of the aircraft as if he were the operator.
(3) The operator of an aircraft shall not be required to pay any charge to the Organisation under these Regulations in respect of a flight if he has previously paid tothe Organisation in respect of that flight a charge of the same or a greater amount under the law of a country specified in column 1 of Schedule 2 hereto.
5 

(1) The amount of the charge shall be payable to the Organisation at its principal office in Brussels and shall be paid in United States dollars.
(2) Without prejudice to any existing rule of law relating to the payment, under an order of the Court, of a debt expressed in foreign currency, the equivalent in Sterling of the charge may be recovered in any Court of competent jurisdiction in the United Kingdom.
(3) Nothing in this regulation shall prevent the Organisation from accepting as a good discharge payment in currencies other than United States dollars or at places other than the principal office of the Organisation.
6 

(1) Except in the case of flights specified in regulation 7 of these Regulations, the charge shall be calculated in United States dollars according to the following formula—r=N×Uwhere r is the charge for the flight, N is the number of service units relating to that flight and U is the appropriate unit rate specified in column 3 of Schedule 2 hereto in relation to the specified airspace through which the flight is made, increased or decreased as the case may be by the same percentage as the relevant national currency has increased or decreased against the United States dollar as compared with the rate of exchange specified in column 4 of the said Schedule in relation to that airspace.
(2) For the purpose of the preceding paragraph, the number of service units relating to a flight shall be calculated in accordance with the following formula—N=d×pwhere d is the distance factor for the flight in the specified airspace in question and p is the weight factor for the aircraft concerned.
(3) For the purposes of the preceding paragraph—
(a) the distance factor shall be the number of kilometres in the great circle distance between the points specified in paragraph (4) of this regulation minus 20 kilometres for each landing and take-off in the specified airspace in question, divided by 100 and expressed to two places of decimals, and
(b) the weight factor, subject to the provisions of paragraph (6) of this regulation, shall be equal to the square root of the quotient obtained by dividing by 50 the number of metric tonnes of the maximum total weight authorised of the aircraft and shall be expressed to two places of decimals.
(4) The points referred to in paragraph (3) of this regulation are:
(a) the aerodrome of departure within the specified airspace in question or, if there is no such aerodrome, the point specified in paragraph (5) of this regulation as the standard point of entry into that airspace for the route in question or, in the case specified in the proviso to that paragraph, the actual point of entry into that airspace; and
(b) the aerodrome of first destination within the specified airspace in question or, if there is no such aerodrome, the point specified in paragraph (5) of this regulation as the standard point of exit from that airspace for the route in question or, in the case specified in the proviso to that paragraph, the actual point of exit from that airspace.
(5) The standard points of entry and exit referred to in paragraph (4) of this regulation are the points, as described in the United Kingdom Air Pilot or relevant AIP as the case may be, where the median line of the appropriate airway or upper Air Traffic Service route so described crosses the boundary of the airspace.
 For the purposes of this paragraph, the appropriate airway or route, in the case of a flight made between 1st January and 31st December in any year, shall be—
(a) the airway or route between the aerodrome of departure and the aerodrome of first destination which appears to the Organisation on 1st January of that year to be the most frequently used such airway or route; or
(b) if the Organisation is unable to ascertain on 1st January of that year which such airway or route is the most frequently used, the shortest such airway or route:
 Provided that in the case of a flight in respect of which the aerodrome of departure or the aerodrome of first destination is situated in one of the zones specified in column 1 of Schedule 3 to these Regulations but that aerodrome is not specified in column 2 of the said Schedule the point of entry into or, as the case may be, of exit from the said airspace shall be the actual point where the flight in question crosses the lateral limits of that airspace as described in the United Kingdom Air Pilot or relevant AIP as the case may be.
(6) The weight factor for an aircraft of any type shall be calculated by reference to the maximum total weight authorised of the heaviest aircraft of that type:
 Provided that where an operator has indicated to the Organisation, within the period of one year immediately preceding the flight, the composition of the fleet of aircraft of which he disposes and that it includes two or more aircraft which are different versions of the same type of aircraft, the weight factor shall be calculated by reference to the average of the maximum total weight authorised of all his aircraft of that type so indicated to the Organisation.
7 
The charge in relation to a flight which enters a specified airspace and in respect of which the aerodrome of departure or the aerodrome of first destination, as the case may be, is specified in column 2 of Schedule 3 hereto and the aerodrome of the first destination or the aerodrome of departure, as the case may be, is situated in any one of the zones specified in column 1 of that Schedule shall be calculated in United States dollars according to the following formula:—C=Z×pwhere C is the charge payable, Z is the charge specified in column 3 of the said Schedule (appropriate to the maximum total weight authorised of 50 metric tonnes) increased or decreased as the case may be by the same percentage as the relevant national currencieshave increased or decreased against the United States dollar as compared with the rate of exchange specified in column 4 of Schedule 2 hereto in relation to that airspace and p is the weight factor of the aircraft concerned determined in accordance with regulations 6(3)(b) and 6(6) of these Regulations.
8 

(1) For the purposes of regulations 6 and 7 the rate of exchange of the United States dollar to a national currency shall be the average monthly rate of exchange of the United States dollar to that national currency established by the International Monetary Fund and publication in the International Financial Statistics of the International Monetary Fund for the month preceding the month during which the flight takes place shall be conclusive evidence of that matter; and a document purporting to be the International Financial Statistics published by the International Monetary Fund shall in any proceedings be received in evidence and, unless the contrary is proved, be deemed to be such a document.
(2) In the event that the International Monetary Fund does not publish the International Financial Statistics for the month preceding the month during which the flight takes place, a certificate given by or on behalf of the Treasury stating the average monthly rate of exchange of the United States dollar to a national currency for the month preceding the month during which the flight takes place shall be conclusive evidence of that matter; and a document purporting to be such a certificate shall in any proceedings be received in evidence and, unless the contrary is proved, be deemed to be such a certificate.
9 
These Regulations shall not apply to the following flights—
(i) flights by military aircraft;
(ii) flights made for the purposes of search and rescue operations;
(iii) flights by aircraft of which the maximum total weight authorised is 5700kg or less made entirely in accordance with the Visual Flight Rules in the Rules of the Air and Air Traffic Control Regulations 1985;
(iv) flights terminating at the aerodrome from which the aircraft has taken off;
(v) flights other than the flights referred to in paragraph (i) of this regulation made by aircraft which are the property of a State (including customs and police aircraft) and which are not made for commercial purposes;
(vi) flights made exclusively for the purpose of checking or testing equipment used or intended to be used as aids to air navigation;
(vii) flights made exclusively for the purpose of instruction or testing of flight crew;(viii)flights made exclusively for the purpose of enabling an aircraft to qualify for the issue or renewal of a Certificate of Airworthiness or of the validation thereof or the approval of a modification of the aircraft, after an application has been made for such issue, renewal, validation or approval as the case may be;
(ix) flights made by aircraft of which the maximum total weight authorised is less than two metric tonnes;
(x) flights between points within the specified airspace of Austria;
(xi) flights between points within the specified airspace of France;
(xii) flights made by helicopters beween any point in the United Kingdom and an offshore installation within the area bounded by straight lines joining successively the following points—
 N6200 W00400; N6200 E00400; N5600 E00400; N5600 W00100; N5740 W00100; N5740 W00400; N6200 W00400.
(xiii) flights made by helicopters between any point in the United Kingdom and an offshore installation within the area bounded by straight lines joining successively the following points—
 N5500 W00100; N5500 E00300; N5423 E00245; N5256 E00309; N5230 E00247; N5226 E00137; N5238 E00140; N5251 E00124; N5319 E00010; N5500 W00100.
10 
Where default is made in the payment of charges incurred in respect of any aircraft under these Regulations the Organisation may require the CAA to act on behalf of the Organisation in accordance with the provisions of regulations 11 to 14 or any of them.
11 
Where such a requirement has been made, the CAA or an authorised person may on behalf of the Organisation, subject to the provisions of this and the following Regulations, take such steps as are necessary to detain, pending payment, either—
(a) the aircraft in respect of which the charges were incurred (whether or not they were incurred by the person who is the operator of the aircraft at the time when the detention begins); or
(b) any other aircraft of which the person in default is the operator at the time when the detention begins;and if charges are not paid within 56 days of the date when the detention begins, the CAA may sell the aircraft on behalf of the Organisation in order to satisfy the charges.
12 
The CAA or the authorised person concerned shall not detain, or continue to detain, an aircraft on behalf of the Organisation under these Regulations by reason of any alleged default in the payment of charges payable under these Regulations if the operator of the aircraft or any other person claiming an interest therein—
(a) disputes that the charges, or any of them, are due or, if the aircraft is detained under regulation 11(a) of these Regulations, that the charges in question were incurred in respect of that aircraft; and
(b) gives to the Organisation, pending the determination of the dispute, sufficient security for the payment of the charges which are alleged to be due.
13 
The CAA shall not sell an aircraft on behalf of the Organisation under these Regulations without the leave of the court; and the court shall not give leave except on proof that a sum is due to the Organisation for charges under these Regulations, that default has been made in the payment thereof and that the aircraft which the Authority seeks leave to sell on behalf of the Organisation is liable to sale under these Regulations by reason of default.
14 
The CAA shall, before applying to the court for leave to sell an aircraft on behalf of the Organisation under these Regulations, take such steps for bringing the proposed application to the notice of interested persons and for affording them an opportunity of becoming a party to the proceedings as are set forth in Schedule 4 to these Regulations. If such leave is given, the CAA shall secure that the aircraft is sold on behalf of the Organisation for the best price that can reasonably be obtained; but failure to comply with any requirement of this regulation or of the said Schedule in respect of any sale, while actionable as against the CAA at the suit of any person suffering loss in consequence thereof, shall not, after the sale has taken place, be a ground for impugning its validity.
15 
The proceeds of any sale under these Regulations shall be applied as follows, and in the following order, that is to say—
(a) in payment of any customs duty which is due in consequence of the aircraft having been brought into the United Kingdom;
(b) in payment of the expenses incurred by the CAA in detaining, keeping and selling the aircraft, including its expenses in connection with the application to the court;
(c) in payment of the charges in respect of any aircraft which the court has found to be due from the operator by virtue of these or any other Regulations under section 73 of the Civil Aviation Act 1982;
(d) in payment of any airport charges incurred in respect of the aircraft which are due from the operator of the aircraft to the person owning or managing the aerodrome at which the aircraft was detained under these Regulations;and the surplus, if any, shall be paid to or among the person or persons whose interests in the aircraft have been divested by reason of the sale.
16 
The power of detention and sale conferred by these Regulations in respect of an aircraft extends to the equipment of the aircraft and any stores for use in connection with its operation (being equipment and stores carried in the aircraft) whether or not the property of the person who is its operator, and references to the aircraft in regulations 11 to 15 of these Regulations include, except where the context otherwise requires, references to any such equipment and stores.
17 
The power of detention conferred by these Regulations in respect of an aircraft extends to any aircraft documents carried in it, and any such documents may, if the aircraft is sold under these Regulations, be transferred by the CAA to the purchaser.
18 
The power conferred by these Regulations to detain an aircraft may be exercised on any occasion when the aircraft is on an aerodrome to which section 88 of the Civil Aviation Act 1982 for the time being applies.
19 
Nothing in these Regulations shall prejudice any right of the Organisation to recover any charges, or any part thereof, by action.
Peter Bottomley
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State,
Department of Transport
2nd March 1989
SCHEDULE 1
Regulation 2


(1) (2)
Regulations Revoked References
The Civil Aviation (Route Charges for Navigation Services) Regulations 1984 S.I. 1984/1920
The Civil Aviation (Route Charges for Navigation Services) (Amendment) Regulations 1985 S.I. 1985/160
The Civil Aviation (Route Charges for Navigation Services) (Second Amendment) Regulations 1985 S.I. 1985/1916
The Civil Aviation (Route Charges for Navigation Services) (Third Amendment) Regulations 1986 S.I. 1986/2120
The Civil Aviation (Route Charges for Navigation Services) (Fourth Amendment) Regulations 1987 S.I. 1987/2083
The Civil Aviation (Route Charges for Navigation Services) (Fifth Amendment) Regulations 1988 S.I. 1988/2130
SCHEDULE 2
Regulations 3(1), 6(1) and 7


(1) (2) (3) (4)
Country Publication in which FIRS are described Unit Rate in US $ Established at a Rate of exchange of
Austria AIP Austria 72·89 1 US $ = 12·966 Sch
Belgium AIP Belgique 51·40 1 US $ = 38·623 BF
France AIP France (France Metropolitaine) 51·85 1 US $ = 6·2152 FF
Germany, Federal Republic of AIP Germany 52·49 1 US $ = 1·8440 DM
Greece AIP Greece 20·24 1 US $ = 147·657 Dra
Ireland, Republic of AIP Ireland 32·96 1 US $ = 0·68655 £Ir
Netherlands AIP Netherlands 49·50 1 US $ = 2·0804 G
Portugal AIP Portugal 36·85 1 US $ = 149·954 Esc
 Santa Maria FIR—12·26
Spain AIP Espana Madrid & BarcelonaFIRS—39·87CanariesFIRS— 32·83 1 US $ = 122·218 Pts
Switzerland AIP Switzerland 69·53 1 US $ = 1·5321 SF
Turkey AIP Turkey 31·00 1 US $ = 1,419·14 LT
United Kingdom United KingdomAir Pilot 56·11 1 US $ = £0·586470

SCHEDULE 3
Regulation 7


(1) (2) (3)
Aerodromes of departure (or of first destination) situated Aerodromes of first destination (or of departure) Amount of the charge in US $
ZONE I
—between W01400 and W11000 and North of N5500 with the exception of Iceland 
Frankfurt 881·26
London 550·41
Paris 751·62
Prestwick 287·84
ZONE II
—between W03000 and W11000 and N2800 and N5500 
Amsterdam 578·64
Athens 941·08
Basle-Mulhouse 730·80
Belfast 148·07
Belgrade 1112·54
Berlin-Schonefeld 584·14
Berlin-Tegel 813·97
Birmingham 342·07
Bordeaux 373·73
Brussels 599·14
Cardiff 299·55
Casablanca 349·53
Cologne-Bonn 693·87
Copenhagen 497·37
Dakar 161·59
Dublin 159·13
Dubrovnik 1123·43
Dusseldorf 691·76
Frankfurt 766·84
Geneva 672·96
Glasgow 194·15
Hamburg 684·25
Helsinki 306·36
Jeddah 1021·22
Lagos 154·60
Lamezia-Terme 827·92
Las Palmas (Canary Islands) 414·02
Lisbon 385·59
Ljubljana 1087·47
London 402·36
Luxembourg 681·01
Lyons 630·80
Maastricht 659·79
Madrid 471·53
Malaga 575·18
Manchester 315·93
Manston 476·45
Milan 761·44
Monrovia 153·86
Moscow 410·81
Munich 890·91
Naples-Capodichino 854·76
Newcastle 305·71
Nice 723·81
Oporto 274·50
Oslo 349·57
Ostend 521·40
Paris 497·82
Pisa 760·16
Ponta Delgada (Azores) 159·63
Prague 870·61
Prestwick 194·15
Riyadh 1208·27
Rome 813·35
Sal Island (Cape Verde) 179·61
Santa Maria (Azores) 170·78
Santiago 223·72
Shannon 125·25
Stockholm 324·88
Stuttgart 793·72
Tel-Aviv 1164·34
Tenerife 384·93
Turin 808·03
Venice 936·87
Vienna 1114·00
Warsaw 501·01
Zagreb 1112·54
Zurich 772·48
ZONE III
—West of W11000 and between N2800 and N5500 
Amsterdam 631·95
Dusseldorf 718·91
Frankfurt 748·18
London 527·04
Luxembourg 791·80
Madrid 364·69
Manchester 411·47
Milan 934·23
Paris 634·75
Prestwick 256·98
Shannon 119·32
Zurich 954·99
ZONE IV
—West of W03000 and between the equator and N2800 
Amsterdam 818·93
Berlin-Schonefeld 703·67
Bordeaux 757·22
Brussels 590·62
Cologne-Bonn 666·19
Dusseldorf 696·69
Frankfurt 812·18
Las Palmas (Canary Islands) 469·17
Lisbon 531·64
London 465·83
Lyons 1002·58
Madrid 657·40
Manchester 482·48
Marseilles 1029·07
Milan 987·71
Oporto 517·04
Paris 744·65
Porto Santo (Madeira) 337·39
Prague 885·62
Sal Island (Cape Verde) 100·41
Santa Maria (Azores) 224·73
Santiago 514·11
Shannon 147·55
Tenerife 465·89
Toulouse 852·88
Zurich 879·61
SCHEDULE 4
Regulation 14
1 
The CAA, if it proposes to apply to the court for leave to sell an aircraft on behalf of the Organisation under these Regulations, shall take such of the following steps for bringing the proposed application to the notice of persons whose interests may be affected by the determination of the court thereon and for affording to any such person an opportunity of becoming a party to the proceedings on the application as are applicable to the aircraft:—
(1) At least 21 days before applying to the court, the CAA shall publish—
(i) in the London Gazette and also if the aircraft is detained in Scotland, in the Edinburgh Gazette, or if it is detained in Northern Ireland, in the Belfast Gazette; and
(ii) in one or more local newspapers circulating in the locality in which the aircraft is detained
 such notice as is prescribed in paragraph 2 of this Schedule, and shall also, unless in that case it is impracticable to do so, serve such a notice, in the manner so prescribed, on each of the following persons:
(a) the person in whose name the aircraft is registered;
(b) the person, if any, who appears to the CAA to be the owner of the aircraft;
(c) any person who appears to the CAA to be a charterer of the aircraft whether or not by demise;
(d) any person who appears to the CAA to be the operator of the aircraft;
(e) H P Information Limited, being a company incorporated under the Companies Act 1985;
(f) any person who is registered as a mortgagee of the aircraft under an Order in Council made under section 86 of the Civil Aviation Act 1982 or who appears to the CAA to be a mortgagee of the aircraft under the law of any country other than the United Kingdom;
(g) any other person who appears to the CAA to have a proprietary interest in the aircraft.
(2) If any person who has been served with a notice in accordance with sub-paragraph (1) of this paragraph informs the CAA in writing within 14 days of the service of the notice of his desire to become a party to the proceedings the CAA shall make that person a defendant to the application.
2 

(1) A notice under paragraph 1 of this Schedule shall—
(a) state the nationality and registration marks of the aircraft;
(b) state the type of aircraft;
(c) state that by reason of default in the payment of a sum due to the Organisation for charges imposed by these Regulations, the CAA, on a date which shall be specified in the notice, detained the aircraft under these Regulations and, unless payment of the sum so due is made within a period of 56 days from the date when the detention began, or within 21 days of the date of service of the notice, whichever shall be the later, will apply to the court for leave to sell the aircraft;
(d) invite the person to whom the notice is given to inform the CAA within 14 days of the service of the notice if he wishes to become a party to the proceedings on the application.
(2) A notice under paragraph 1 of this Schedule shall be served—
(a) by delivering it to the person to whom it is to be sent; or
(b) by leaving it at his usual or last known place of business or abode; or
(c) by sending it by post in a prepaid registered letter, or by recorded delivery service, addressed to him at his usual or last known place of business or abode; or
(d) if the person to whom it is to be sent is an incorporated company or body, by delivering it to the secretary, clerk or other appropriate officer of the company or body at their registered or principal office, or sending it by post in a prepaid registered letter, or by recorded delivery service, addressed to the secretary, clerk or officer of the company or body at that office.
(3) Any notice which is sent by post in accordance with the preceding paragraph to a place outside the United Kingdom shall be sent by air mail or by some other equally expeditious means.