Marin Independent Journal

Jet fuel subsidies need accountabi­lity for residents affected by airplane pollution

- By David Huerta

California has a proud history of aggressive­ly confrontin­g and tackling the most critical environmen­tal issues of our time while still prioritizi­ng the needs of working people. We've taken meaningful steps to make cars burn cleaner gasoline and reduce the smog that harms our communitie­s, yet the aviation industry remains practicall­y unchanged.

California this year has the opportunit­y to lead the country by cleaning up the dirty aviation industry.

The commercial aviation industry keeps taking more and more taxpayer dollars without being held accountabl­e for the harm their emissions cause our health. In California, almost every industry pays a tax for the fossil fuels that they burn to mitigate their impact on the environmen­t. But the airline industry, which is one of the top-polluting industries, has continuall­y been exempt from that tax.

The airlines demand money for old polluting fuel and money for socalled “sustainabl­e aviation fuels,” yet they cry foul when those subsidies come with standards or any meaningful oversight. Unions find this approach as unfair as it is unsustaina­ble.

Aviation is already a significan­t contributo­r to climate change, and emissions have the potential to grow substantia­lly in the coming decades. Gov. Gavin Newsom and the California Air Resources Board have taken real and significan­t steps to address the emissions caused by the airlines with their final scoping plan recommenda­tions. The state's climate blueprint doubles (from 10% to 20%) the amount of aviation fuel demand that is met by electricit­y or hydrogen by 2045.

This is critical because California has to incentiviz­e the industry to get away from unsustaina­ble fuels. Even sustainabl­e aviation fuels have a significan­t carbon footprint and still emit harmful pollutants into our atmosphere and into communitie­s surroundin­g airports. These fuels are an an important step towards cleaning up the airline industry, but workers continue to call for increased electrific­ation of the airline industry because the state cannot subsidize airlines and their dirty fuels and expect to meet our clean energy goals.

Airport workers, many of whom are people of color, immigrants and women, are essential to our nation's aviation system, keeping cabins clean, airports and passengers secure, and elderly and disabled passengers cared for. They have worked through a global pandemic, climate disasters and record-breaking travel seasons.

Aviation emissions impact workers and their communitie­s in several key ways — from the greenhouse gas emissions that drive climate change to the localized air pollutants that harm the health of people who live near or work at airports.

Just five airlines account for two-thirds of the domestic market share. While the small number of airlines that comprise the industry continue to consolidat­e their power over passengers and saw historic revenues, that success does not lift up all industry workers. Airline lobbyists fought hard to weaken the economic standards of these workers, and have repeatedly opposed living wage increases and healthcare standards for aviation industry workers throughout the country — even while a global pandemic wreaked havoc on our health and economic security.

Industry-scale steps are needed to address commercial aviation's outsized role in climate change, and California leaders must ensure that these solutions do not simply reinforce the environmen­tal and economic racism airport workers and residents of airport-adjacent communitie­s are fighting against. The CARB scoping plan deserves support. Its recommenda­tions, along with similar policies, can create an accountabl­e and equitable path forward.

If California residents want to achieve the goal of a clean energy future, we cannot continue subsidizin­g the commercial airline industry while they avoid serious accountabi­lity.

David Huerta is President of SEIU United Service Workers West, which represents more than 45,000 janitors, security officers, airport service workers and other property service workers across California. Distribute­d by CalMatters.

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