National Post

MAX groundings, emissions top of mind for leaders

UN aviation agency meeting in Montreal

- Allison Lampert

• Global aviation leaders will be under pressure to deepen efforts to tackle airline emissions as they gather this week under the shadow of protests led by Swedish activist Greta Thunberg.

The 16- year- old, who inspired a ‘flight-shaming’ protest movement against aviation and sailed across the Atlantic rather than board a plane, is expected to join a march on Friday in Montreal as 193 nations meet at the UN aviation agency.

The Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­on holds its assembly every three years and its 75th- anniversar­y gathering starting on Tuesday comes at a time of growing concerns about climate change and a sixmonth- old grounding of the Boeing 737 MAX jetliner.

On Monday, the head of the U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion, Steve Dickson, was to brief global regulators about delayed progress in approving MAX flights, which were halted in March following two fatal crashes.

The grounding is not on the agenda of the Sept. 24Oct. 4 assembly but regulators will be anxious to avoid divisions on the sidelines over actions needed to restore the jet to service.

The debate over aviation’s impact on the environmen­t will be a major topic for the public side of the talks, however.

Commercial flying accounts for 2.5 per cent of carbon emissions. But with passenger numbers forecast to double to 8.2 billion by 2037, experts say emissions will rise if no action is taken.

At its last full meeting in 2016, ICAO fostered the first global industrial climate initiative with a medium-term scheme to help airlines avoid adding to their net emissions from 2020.

The Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for Internatio­nal Aviation (CORSIA) requires most airlines to limit emissions or offset them by buying credits from environmen­tal projects.

The industry says around US$ 40 billion in climate financing will be generated between 2020 and 2035.

The move eased the threat of a trade war after the European Union initially imposed its own emissions scheme unilateral­ly, but environmen­talists say it did not go far enough.

The EU, some campaigner­s and the industry itself want ICAO to commit now to setting longer- term goals at its 2022 assembly — though they may well differ sharply over what they should be.

Andre w Murphy, aviation manager at the Brussels- based campaign group Transport & Environmen­t, said climate protests led by Thunberg may put more pressure on the assembly.

“Discussion­s in ICAO on boosting climate ambitions have been stuck in neutral for years — Greta’s presence could inject much needed urgency to the debate,” he told Reuters.

ICAO secretary general Fang Liu said she would be open to meeting Thunberg in Montreal.

“Our goal is the same goal as Greta’s,” she said.

The aviation industry has committed to a target of halving net emissions by 2050, compared to 2005 levels, but there is no comparable longterm climate target for aviation set by countries in any internatio­nal agreement, including the 2016 Paris accord. The industry and others believe ICAO can help come up with such a goal.

Airlines insist they can’t tackle the problem alone and are pushing for government help for technology such as alternativ­e fuels.

 ?? Lindsey Wason / Reuters ?? Global regulators were to be briefed Monday on the progress in approving Boeing 737 MAX jet flights.
Lindsey Wason / Reuters Global regulators were to be briefed Monday on the progress in approving Boeing 737 MAX jet flights.

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