Houston Chronicle Sunday

Climate of guilt: Flying no longer the high road?

- By Frank Jordans and David Keyton

NYKOPING, Sweden — School’s out for summer and Swedish lawyer Pia Bjorstrand, her husband and their two sons are shoulderin­g backpacks, ready to board the first of many trains on a whistle-stop vacation around northern Europe.

The family is part of a small but growing movement in Europe and North America that’s shunning air travel because it produces high levels of greenhouse gas emissions. While experts say fighting climate change will require bigger and bolder actions by government­s around the world, some people are doing what they can to help, including changing long-held travel habits.

The trend is most prominent in Sweden, where the likes of teen climate activist Greta Thunberg have challenged travelers to confront the huge carbon cost of flying.

“Even I, who was climate aware 10 years ago, didn’t think about flying in the way that I think now,” said Bjorstrand as she waits on the platform of Nykoping station in eastern Sweden. “I didn’t know that the effect of flying was so big. So we flew everywhere.”

Airlines argue that flying accounts for just 2 percent of man-made greenhouse gas emissions and increasing­ly efficient planes now use about the same amount of fuel per passenger as a half-full car. Yet the ease and falling cost of air travel is enabling more people to fly more often, meaning airline emissions are soaring even as other sources decline.

In 2013, commercial carriers emitted 710 million tons of carbon dioxide.

This year, industry group IATA predicts airlines’ emissions of CO2 will reach 927 million tons, more than

an industrial country such as Germany. The figures don’t include other factors that scientists say increase the greenhouse effect from flying.

Planes fare particular­ly poorly compared with rail travel, especially in countries where trains can draw on a plentiful supply of renewable energy, like Sweden.

Bjorstrand’s train journey from Nykoping to the Danish capital Copenhagen weighs in at 5.3 pounds of CO2 per person, according to an online calculator created by the Germanybas­ed Institute for Energy and Environmen­tal Studies consultanc­y. That compares with over 260 pounds of CO2 for a oneway flight.

Such amounts quickly take a big chunk out of the annual carbon budget of 2,000 kilograms per person that scientists say would be sustainabl­e.

The rail journey is almost twice as long by train — 5 1⁄2 hours compared with three hours of flying and transit — but that’s fine with the family. There’ll be plenty of time for Oscar, 9, to pore over his comic books and Gabriel, 11, to read up on World War II history or just watch the lush green forests and lakes of southern Sweden glide by.

Last year, Sweden’s forests literally went up in smoke as the country experience­d a heat wave that led to wildfires unpreceden­ted in its modern history, driving home the possible consequenc­es of global warming for this rich Nordic nation.

It was around that time that Thunberg, then a 15-year-old student in Stockholm, began staging weekly protests outside parliament that inspired similar demonstrat­ions elsewhere.

“I can see guilt growing,” said Bjorstrand. “Some colleagues try not to talk to me about their long-haul flights.”

The main Swedish train operator, SJ, says it sold 1.5 million more tickets in 2018 than the previous year. Even the number of business travelers is up, by 12 percent in the first three months of this year.

Pushback against flightsham­ing is coming from some unlikely sources.

Anders Levermann, a scientist at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, believes that the world needs to stop adding carbon to the atmosphere by midcentury if it wants to keep average temperatur­e increases below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) as outlined in the 2015 Paris accord.

But he said the climate movement shouldn’t focus only on air travel.

“At the moment it is treated like whales for biodiversi­ty,” Levermann said. “It’s a poster child.”

A more effective way to reduce emissions would be to pressure political leaders into taking decisions that have a nationwide or global effect, rather than guilttripp­ing individual­s into minimizing their carbon footprint, said Levermann.

There is some hope that government­s will act. Environmen­tal parties were one of the big winners of last month’s European Union Parliament elections. Leaders of the 28nation bloc will this week debate a long-term strategy on climate change, while lower-ranking officials meet in The Hague to discuss taxing aviation fuel and airline tickets.

“For decades, government­s have failed to regulate aviation emissions,” said Andrew Murphy, an aviation expert at Belgiumbas­ed pressure group Transport and Environmen­t. Some pin their hopes on technologi­cal advances in aviation, including electric planes, though viable commercial battery-powered models aren’t on the horizon yet.

In the meantime, airlines are trying to address customer concerns even as they prepare to fight new emissions taxes.

“It’s obviously a hot topic and something we’re seeing particular­ly in the European market,” said Steffen Milchsack, spokesman for Lufthansa. The German airlines group wants to start using synthetic kerosene produced with renewable energy in coming years and recently began paying a small fee to compensate the carbon emissions caused by staff travel.

Such small, voluntary payments — known as offsets — are preferred by airlines over government­imposed taxes or carbon caps.

So far, a majority of passengers are still unwilling to pay more for flights or fly less. A survey by the German travel agents’ associatio­n, DRV, found that only 2 percent of air travel last year was offset.

But Julia Zhu, a spokeswoma­n for Atmosfair, a German nonprofit organizati­on, says the amount of CO2 offsets it processed rose from 550,000 tons in 2017 to 800,000 tons last year.

“The summer of 2018 was sort of a turning point,” she said.

Atmosfair uses money from offsets — typically a few dollars per person for a short-haul flight — to support small-scale carbon reduction efforts, such as buying efficient cooking stoves for families in Africa and Asia.

Zhu said companies are increasing­ly deciding to offset business travel, with a similar effort underway among U.S. academics. Murphy believes grassroots efforts to fly less could ultimately have a significan­t impact.

The aviation industry warns there might be unintended consequenc­es.

“Those that propose traveling less are heading to a darker place,” said

Paul Stein, technology chief at aircraft engine maker Rolls Royce. “We underestim­ate at our peril the role that aviation has in connecting our planet, our cultures, understand­ing each other and moving goods and services.”

Even Pia Bjorstrand isn’t prepared to give up flying altogether just yet. Last winter, like many sunstarved Scandinavi­ans, the family took a long-distance flight. They bought carbon credits to offset the trip to Namibia.

“The U.S. or Africa or Southeast Asia, it’s hard to go by train,” she said.

 ?? Michael Probst / Associated Press ?? A small but growing movement in Europe and North America is consciousl­y shunning air travel because of its negative effects on the environmen­t.
Michael Probst / Associated Press A small but growing movement in Europe and North America is consciousl­y shunning air travel because of its negative effects on the environmen­t.

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