Fiji Sun

Aviation is not the enemy in climate battle, CEO

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Flyin is not “the enemy” in the fight against climate change, the chief executive of Heathrow Airport has said.

John Holland-Kaye told the BBC’s Today programme: “The answer is not to stop people flying. It has to be about decarbonis­ing aviation.”

The UK’s aviation industry is promising to reduce its net carbon emissions to zero by 2050.

Cleaner engines, new fuels and planting trees will all help, according to the industry group Sustainabl­e Aviation. Mr Holland-Kaye said: “The enemy is carbon, not aviation. We need to protect the ability to fly in a world without carbon.

“When the government blocked Heathrow expansion 10 years ago, people started flying through Amsterdam and Paris instead, taking two flights instead of one and not a single tonne of carbon was saved.”

He said synthetic fuels were the way forward. “It has been around for about 100 years and is becoming more affordable. It needs a real push on investment.”

‘Crisis is here and now’

Sustainabl­e Aviation says the industry’s plan will mean airlines can cut pollution even as passenger numbers grow by an expected 70 per cent.

But campaigner­s say the only way to cut airline pollution is by reducing air travel and cancelling new airports and runways.

“We need to restrict flying,” said Muna Suleiman, from Friends of the Earth. “We can’t have airport expansion at the same time.”

Rail travel and buses are greener alternativ­es and taxes should be applied to frequent fliers, she said.

Biofuels, which Sustainabl­e Aviation say will be part of the industry’s plan, still pollute, Ms Suleiman added.

“The crisis is here and now.”

The aviation sector is under increasing pressure to come up with a plan to cut emissions, especially as it has no commercial comparator yet to the electric car, which is seen as the auto industry’s hope for cutting emissions.

While other forms of transport produce more carbon, individual journeys on planes produce large amounts of CO2.

Reducing emission

Sustainabl­e Aviation says the UK industry can reduce its emissions of CO2 from 30 million tonnes a year to zero, without restrictin­g growth.

An economy-class return flight from London to New York emits an estimated 0.67 tonnes of CO2 per passenger, according to the calculator from the UN’s civil aviation body, the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­on.

That is equivalent to 11 per cent of the average annual emissions for someone in the UK or about the same as all of those caused by someone living in Ghana for more than a year.

US firm Wright Electric said last week it had started electric engine developmen­t for a 186-seater plane, and hoped to begin test flights in 2023.

British Airways is investing in a project to make fuel from rubbish.

‘Difficult sector’

“We are going to have to do this through many projects,” Alex Cruz, chief executive of British Airways, told the BBC.

“Biofuels will give us a greener alternativ­e and we are attracted by that,” he said, while conceding that they will still produce carbon dioxide and that they are expensive at the moment.

BA will also retire old planes, with the double-decker Boeing 747 being phased out in 2024.

Other plans include planting trees - so-called carbon offsetting - and investing in renewable power sources, said Matt Gorman, a council member of Sustainabl­e Aviation.

“Aviation is one of the more difficult sectors to decarbonis­e but we are absolutely confident it can be done,” said Mr Gorman.

The aviation sector is under increasing pressure to come up with a plan to cut emissions, especially as it has no commercial comparator yet to the electric car, which is seen as the auto industry’s hope for cutting emissions.

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 ?? Photo: Getty Images ?? The UK’s aviation industry is promising to reduce its net carbon emissions to zero by 2050.
Photo: Getty Images The UK’s aviation industry is promising to reduce its net carbon emissions to zero by 2050.

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