There was no room for Airbnb’s protests Wednesday at the City Council Housing Committee, which passed a bill requiring home-sharing companies to hand over the names and addresses of their hosts.

The full Council was expected to enact the measure later in the day.

Airbnb and other short-term home-sharing services face fines of $1,500 per listing — or the total amount of the fees collected during the preceding year — if they don’t cough up the information.

Airbnb has waged an all-out war against the measure, claiming it violates the privacy of its hosts and caters to the hotel industry — a point executives hammered home in a Tuesday night conference call.

“After taking hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from the hotel industry, we’re not surprised the City Council refused to meet with their own constituents who rely on home- sharing to pay the bills and then voted to protect the profits of big hotels,” said Airbnb spokeswoman Liz DeBold Fusco.

The company has about 52,000 listings in New York City.

Airbnb honchos have repeatedly said that the company would leave New York City given all the red tape, but is staying for the benefit of home-sharers who use the service to help “make ends meet” their own with sky-high housing costs.

As part of its campaign, Airbnb released a report in June that tallied hotel industry campaign donations to Council members.

Of the six Housing Committee members who received more than $5,000 from the hotel industry in the 2013 and 2017 election cycles, Carlina Rivera (D-Manhattan), the bill’s primary sponsor, racked up the most contributions during the 2013 and 2017 election cycles: $33,800, according to the report.

Rivera told The Post that Airbnb’s efforts are simply “optics” and chalked up the donations – which include a $22,800 contribution from the Hotel Workers for Stronger Communities, an independent expenditure funded by the Hotel and Motel Trades Council – to her support of unions.

“I proudly support unions, but this is an affordable housing issue,” she said.

If enacted as expected, the legislation will take effect in six months.

When San Francisco passed a similar measure, Airbnb listings dropped by 50 percent.