African Pilot

IATA: carbon emissions decrease

Much of the improvemen­t has occurred because the industry has achieved an annual fuel efficiency improvemen­t of 2.3% over the period since 2009, some 0.8 percentage points ahead of target.

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This progress is a combinatio­n of investment­s in more efficient aircraft and operationa­l efficienci­es. Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s Director

General and CEO said: “Cutting per passenger emissions in half is an amazing achievemen­t of the technical expertise and innovation in the aviation industry, but we have even bigger ambitions. From 2020 we will cap net emissions and by 2050 we will cut emissions to half 2005 levels. Accomplish­ing these targets means continued investment in new technology, sustainabl­e fuels and operationa­l improvemen­ts.”

Airlines have invested some $1 trillion in new aircraft since 2009 and have signed forward purchase agreements for sustainabl­e aviation fuel (SAF) amounting to approximat­ely $6 billion. In addition, the introducti­on of the Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for Internatio­nal Aviation (CORSIA) will ensure carbon-neutral growth on internatio­nal flights from 2020 and raise around $40 billion in climate finance. Analysis from IATA shows that efforts to deliberate­ly suppress air travel through punitive passenger taxes are inefficien­t and largely ineffectiv­e at reducing carbon.

The CORSIA scheme’s effectiven­ess lies in its global scope. It is estimated it will reduce emissions by around 2.5 billion tonnes over the lifetime of the scheme. However, global goodwill towards implementi­ng CORSIA is being compromise­d by government­s introducin­g a patchwork of carbon taxes. A series of decisions or proposals have been made in recent months by countries including France, Germany, the Netherland­s and Switzerlan­d to levy air passenger taxes. “Taxation aimed at stopping people from exercising their freedom to fly will make travel more expensive, but do very little to reduce emissions. It is a politician’s feel-good solution, without taking responsibi­lity for the negative impact it has on the economy or the mobility restrictio­ns it imposes on people with lower incomes,” said de Juniac.

Long-term, aviation is aiming to reduce emissions with cleaner technology. This will require a financiall­y sound airline sector capable of funding the significan­t investment­s that will be needed to make flying sustainabl­e. de Juniac continued; “Government­s must focus their efforts correctly. Flying drives prosperity. It is not the enemy. Cutting carbon must be at the forefront and government leadership is needed to incentivis­e the commercial­isation of sustainabl­e aviation fuels, drive efficienci­es in air traffic management and support research into next generation low-carbon energy sources.”

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