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Heathrow plans ‘must address air quality’

LONDON AND SOUTHEASTE­RN ENGLAND NEED MORE AIRPORT CAPACITY TO MEET DEMAND

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Britain’s government should not give the goahead for the expansion of Heathrow Airport until its officials can show they will comply with air quality, noise and other environmen­tal concerns, a parliament­ary committee report said yesterday.

The Environmen­tal Audit Committee chair, Huw Irranca-Davies, said the purpose of the report was not to reopen the debate on whether there should be airport expansion or where it should be. But the Labour Party lawmaker said the airport must demonstrat­e that it can reconcile expansion with legal air pollution limits and other concerns.

“To defer dealing with the environmen­tal impact of a third runway would be irresponsi­ble and could lead to legal challenges as a result of the potential damage to public health from increased air pollution and noise,” Irranca-Davies said.

London and southeaste­rn England needs more airport capacity to meet the growing demands of business travellers and tourists. Heathrow and rival Gatwick, 50km south of central London, have offered competing projects that will cost as much as £18.6 billion (Dh106.8 billion).

The government is believed to be nearing a decision on which proposal to choose after Britain’s Airports Commission unanimousl­y recommende­d the constructi­on of a third runway at Heathrow, Europe’s busiest airport.

The commission decided that Heathrow presented a stronger case for the British economy than rival Gatwick.

However, it stressed that Europe’s largest airport needs to address air quality, noise and community concerns.

The committee concluded there was a gap between the government’s current policies and the policies modelled by the commission to show that “expansion could be achieved within CO2 limits.”

“Planes are becoming more fuel-efficient, but this alone will not keep aviation emissions in line with the government’s climate change targets given the growth in passenger numbers,” Irranca-Davies said.

“Even without expansion, aviation is on track to exceed its climate change target. We heard evidence that those targets might be met in theory, but at present there is a policy vacuum and evidence-based scepticism as to whether they can be met in practice.”

Heathrow did not directly address any of the committee’s concerns in a statement yesterday. However it said the committee was right “that the environmen­tal impact of a third runway must be considered alongside the economic benefits expansion will bring.”

Planes are becoming more fuel-efficient, but this alone will not keep aviation emissions in line with the government’s climate change targets given the growth in passenger numbers.”

Huw Irranca-Davies | Environmen­tal Audit

Committee chair

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