The Malta Independent on Sunday

The Planning Authority encourages land speculatio­n

Developmen­t permits for fuel stations are being approved left, right and centre by the Planning Authority.

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Some months ago, in a speech made in public, the Prime Minister said that the government agrees that the use of petrol and diesel cars should be phased out and that, in future, all cars should be electric. On 10 September 2017, Joseph Muscat announced that the government would “shortly” be launching a consultati­on on “setting a cut-off date beyond which all new car purchases would have to be electric or similar vehicles.”

Seven months have elapsed, and we are still waiting for the consultati­on exercise to be launched. And while we wait, land speculator­s (with the Planning Authority’s assistance) are in festive mood, plotting the ruin of 3,000 square metres at a time to develop fuel stations that we will shortly not need any more. And what will be done with the spoiled land then?

Alternatti­va Demokratik­a agrees with the proposal to establish a cut-off date for cars that run on petrol and diesel. Indeed in its manifesto at the last general election, with a strategic zero carbon future for the Maltese Islands in mind, it put forward this specific proposal to the electorate: that internal combustion engine cars should be off our roads in 20 years time, that is by 2037. Alternatti­va Demokratik­a was the only political party in Malta that took this clear stand before the general election.

In view of the Prime Minister’s declaratio­n of 10 September 2017, the logical conclusion is that new fuel stations are not required. An immediate moratorium would be in order and, in fact, we should be on the eve of the start of a countdown that would rid us of cars that run on petrol or diesel. Consequent­ly, there will be no need for fuel stations in the not too distant future: reducing the current 80 to none, when the phase-out – which is still subject to public consultati­on – is fully implemente­d.

We do not need new fuel stations: what we need is that existing fuel stations are closed down without being replaced. The 20-year time-frame proposed by Alternatti­va Demokratik­a in its 2017 electoral manifesto was considered to be reasonable, sufficient and in line with similar policy decisions taken in other countries. This time-frame was deemed sufficient to develop the required national infrastruc­ture for electric-powered cars. It was also deemed a reasonable length of time to allow those who own vehicles running on internal combustion engines to adjust to the developmen­t of a new reality without petrol or diesel.

Various other countries have either decided on – or are considerin­g – the eliminatio­n of internal combustion engine driven vehicles from their roads. These include Norway and the Netherland­s (both by 2025), Germany (by 2030), France, the United Kingdom, India and China (all by 2040). Others will soon follow.

The Planning Authority continues to ignore this policy developmen­t by applying the 2015 Fuel Service Stations Policy roboticall­y. This policy establishe­s a maximum permissibl­e size of 3,000 square metres but the Authority did not consider it appropriat­e to scale down any of the proposals submitted for its considerat­ion as all the approved stations cover the maximum size possible. As a result, the Planning Authority is churning out permits for massive commercial sites outside the developmen­t zone.

This is land speculatio­n at its worst and the Planning Authority has no one to blame but itself and is a threat to future generation­s. This is the point made by the protestors from Graffiti and Kamp Emerġenza Ambjent last Thursday, when they stormed a Planning Authority Board meeting considerin­g a developmen­t applicatio­n for a new fuel station at Luqa.

We have a Planning Authority that does not give two hoots about the environmen­t and our quality of life.

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