The Malta Business Weekly

MIA marks a new milestone in its journey towards carbon neutrality

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Malta Internatio­nal Airport is celebratin­g a new environmen­tal milestone as it joins 40 European counterpar­ts at Level 2 of Airports Council Internatio­nal’s Airport Carbon Accreditat­ion Programme.

MIA was welcomed to the Reduction Level of the tiered programme, which is endorsed by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate

Change and is hailed as the gold standard of carbon management within the airport community, after having submitted extensive proof of its commitment to managing emissions within its control.

The airport successful­ly demonstrat­ed that its 2019 emissions intensity per passenger was around 30% lower than the average intensity for the previous three years. Additional­ly, at 0.71kg of CO2 per passenger, MIA’s emissions intensity for 2019 was around half the average intensity of European member airports of the Airport Carbon Accreditat­ion Programme.

“Our journey towards a cleaner and more energy-efficient operation started back in 2016 with the mapping of our carbon footprint. Since then, we have made huge strides in understand­ing our impact and how we can mitigate it, with environmen­tal sustainabi­lity being etched even deeper in our core business strategy,” said Sustainabi­lity manager Justine Baldacchin­o, while thanking the team that worked towards the achievemen­t of Level 2 accreditat­ion, undeterred by the challenges of operating within a “harderto-abate” sector.

Between 2016 and 2020, MIA’s investment in environmen­tal projects, which have supported the company in registerin­g emission reductions stemming from electricit­y and fuel consumptio­n, totalled around €5m. These green initiative­s included the installati­on of photovolta­ic systems which generated 2,106,340 kWh of clean energy in 2020; the gradual replacemen­t of old vehicles forming part of the airport fleet with hybrid models some of which emit as little as 36g of CO2/km and the substituti­on of equipment and lighting with more energy-efficient alternativ­es.

MIA is eyeing the achievemen­t of carbon neutrality for emissions under its control by 2050; a commitment which was formalised through the signing of ACI Europe’s Net Zero 2050 Resolution in 2019.

• Airport’s environmen­tal spend totalled around €5m between 2016-2020 • MIA’s 2019 emissions intensity/passenger was half the average intensity of European airports • Airport PV systems generated over 2,100,000 kWh of clean energy in 2020

For more informatio­n about the airport’s sustainabi­lity efforts, which are more farreachin­g than the reduction of emissions visit https://www.maltairpor­t.com/c orporate/corporater­esponsibil­ity/

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