Yorkshire Post

MP stepping up calls for airport public inquiry

- Hilary Benn Hilary Benn is the Labour MP for Leeds Central.

PRESSURE IS growing on the Government to hold a public inquiry into Leeds Bradford Airport’s redevelopm­ent plans.

Leeds Central MP Hilary Benn makes the case in The Yorkshire Post today ahead of a final decision being taken by Communitie­s Secretary Robert Jenrick.

Even though Leeds city councillor­s have backed the scheme, it falls to Mr Jenrick to either give approval – or order an inquiry which could take years to complete.

“This one airport plans to emit more CO2 than a number of small countries which are the most vulnerable to climate change,” writes Mr Benn.

“The airport’s planned expansion from 4m to 7m passengers and consequent increase in greenhouse gases is clearly incompatib­le with our commitment to achieve Net Zero, given the way aircraft are currently powered.”

THE GOVERNMENT is currently preparing to host COP26 when countries from across the world will come to the UK to discuss the next steps needed to tackle dangerous climate change.

Meanwhile sitting in Housing and Communitie­s Secretary Robert Jenrick’s inbox is a rather significan­t document.

It’s a planning applicatio­n to expand Leeds Bradford Airport (LBA) and the Government will need to take a decision on this.

This one airport plans to emit more CO2 than a number of small countries which are the most vulnerable to climate change.

While LBA expansion may not be on the scale of Heathrow, the proposal has implicatio­ns that go way beyond the immediate locality of the airport.

It is the aviation equivalent of the proposed new Cumbria coal mine about which ministers now appear to be having second thoughts.

The airport’s planned expansion from four million to seven million passengers, and consequent increase in greenhouse gases, is clearly incompatib­le with our commitment to achieve Net Zero, given the way aircraft are currently powered.

It also goes directly against the advice of the Committee on Climate Change (CCC) which, in its Sixth Carbon Budget, said there should be “no net expansion of UK airport capacity”, unless the sector is on track to sufficient­ly outperform its trajectory to Net Zero.

At present, we are not even close to being on track.

This means that the only way that LBA can expand is if there is a compensati­ng reduction in capacity at another airport.

In the absence of this, approving an expansion at LBA would contradict the advice of the CCC.

Amongst the many individual­s (me included) and organisati­ons pressing Mr Jenrick, the Minister responsibl­e for planning, to hold a public inquiry are over 200 academics, including internatio­nal climate scientists from Leeds University who recently wrote to him urging him to ‘call in’ the applicatio­n.

Indeed, while the applicatio­n was being assessed by Leeds City Council (LCC), evidence was submitted by university experts led by Professor Julia Steinberge­r, a lead author for the United Nations Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change 5th and 6th assessment reports.

This detailed the full climate impact of expansion and stated that an expanded LBA would be emitting 1.227 metric tonnes of carbon dioxide annually by 2030, a factor 2.5 larger than LBA claimed.

Leeds City Council declared a climate emergency in 2019 and committed to achieving Net Zero in the city by 2030.

An inconvenie­nt truth is that this would be impossible to achieve with an expanded LBA.

A ‘call in’ would result in a public inquiry where the climate impact could be fully assessed.

Without leadership, every airport would have the potential to expand in an unregulate­d race to the bottom, which would make it very hard for the UK to achieve its climate commitment­s and would seriously damage the UK’s claim to be a world leader in tackling the climate crisis.

In the year the UK is hosting the COP26 conference, allowing this expansion to go ahead would be a big mistake.

The Secretary of State for Housing, Communitie­s and Local Government now has to decide by tomorrow whether to sign off

The only way LBA can expand is if there is a compensati­ng reduction in another airport.

the applicatio­n or hold a public inquiry.

Lots of people are hoping that he does the right thing and chooses the latter.

Over to you, Mr Jenrick.

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 ??  ?? LEEDS BRADFORD: ‘The plan has implicatio­ns that go beyond the immediate locality of the airport.’
LEEDS BRADFORD: ‘The plan has implicatio­ns that go beyond the immediate locality of the airport.’

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