The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Diabolical double whammy

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That endlessly complex, endlessly adaptable, but also endlessly fragile phenomenon we are inclined to think of as “the environmen­t”, has just been dealt what could yet prove to be a mortal wound.

We have our own environmen­tal laws in Scotland, our own environmen­t secretary in the Holyrood cabinet, but we do not have our own environmen­t. Nature doesn’t stop at the Border, doesn’t behave differentl­y on the far side of it, doesn’t know there is a different set of environmen­tal values and laws there, doesn’t speak with a different accent.

So, when the Westminste­r Government decides in more or less the same breath to build a third runway at Heathrow Airport and abandon plans for a trail-blazing tidal-powered electricit­y station in Swansea, Scotland can rest assured about one thing: it is about to be short-changed by default.

Double whammies don’t get much whammier than this, so let’s take them one at a time.

Heathrow’s third runway is a strategy founded on politics, greed, and nothing else. I read in one London newspaper these words: “London is the world’s capital of aviation.”

It is perhaps the most meaningles­s sentence you will ever read. There is no world capital of aviation. The only place you will ever find a sentence like that being written is in London itself. London has six airports and these process 150 million passengers a year. But that is not enough for London.

Yet Britain has all the runway capacity it will ever need, and while Heathrow and Gatwick operate far beyond their design limits, regional airports have huge spare capacity. But they are not in London and the airlines want London and Westminste­r wants London and London wants London.

Would you like some more numbers? Good. A third runway at Heathrow will increase the total number of take-offs and landings in a year by 480,000 to around 740,000. An extra 16 million long-haul seats will be available by 2040. Long-haul flights deliver absolutely the most potent form of climate poison that we have yet devised.

Would you like to hear the funny bit? Good. The government has backed an extra Heathrow runway “delivered in a cost-efficient and sustainabl­e way, with a comprehens­ive package of measures to support affected communitie­s and protect the environmen­t”. How hilarious is that?

“Comprehens­ive package of measures… to protect the environmen­t” – by creating 16 million long-haul seats. Unless they plan to insist that all aircraft using Heathrow must be solar-powered (in which case a flight to Australia will probably take about a fortnight), creating a comprehens­ive package of measures to protect the environmen­t is simply impossible.

Do not believe them. It is a lie, a very big lie indeed.

Would disseminat­ing internatio­nal air travel around regional airports with spare capacity make any difference? No. Why not?

Because Heathrow is – demonstrab­ly – an overstretc­hed abominatio­n, driven by greed. You can almost see the eyes of the councillor­s of Dundee and Edinburgh and Glasgow and Aberdeen, and Manchester and Birmingham and probably Papa Westray, too, light up a strange green colour as the economic prospects of mini abominatio­ns dawn on them. Disseminat­e the flights, disseminat­e the pollution.

Bottom line: the environmen­t is in trouble. We cannot make every developmen­t decision based on whether or not it will be good for the economy. Government policy – all government­s, everywhere – should be to find ways to reduce air travel, especially long-haul air travel.

We believe we have the right to travel anywhere in the world whenever we want by the fastest possible means. But we do not have that right, because insisting on it will kill our planet, and before that we will have eliminated ourselves.

So, what about tidal power and the abandonmen­t of the Swansea lagoon project? In an island landmass like this one, the potential for wave and tidal power is more or less limitless.

A high-profile project such as this could have kick-started investment, and given the environmen­tal movement – and the planet itself – cause for celebratio­n.

But Business Secretary Greg Clark said it did not demonstrat­e value for money, “however novel and appealing”. Whereas Heathrow’s third runway does? However predictabl­e and unappealin­g?

I find myself wondering when politician­s both north and south of the Border will start to get really serious about the environmen­t and what it might take to make that happen. Scotland would do well to distance itself from the contempt for the environmen­t displayed in Westminste­r.

There is a lot to be said – and a lot of votes to be gained – for Holyrood to start thinking greener than it has ever dared before, to think beyond that species of economic and political greed characteri­sed by the Heathrow decision, and to support exactly the kind of initiative that Westminste­r has just patronisin­gly dismissed as novel and appealing.

A boom in internatio­nal air travel is a one-way ticket to hell on Earth.

Government policy should be to find ways to reduce air travel

 ??  ?? The UK Government has given the green light for a third runway at Heathrow Airport, while at the same time abandoning plans for a tidal-powered electricit­y station in Swansea.
The UK Government has given the green light for a third runway at Heathrow Airport, while at the same time abandoning plans for a tidal-powered electricit­y station in Swansea.
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