Texarkana Gazette

Greenpeace urges Europe to drop short flights, take trains

- The Associated Press

BRUSSELS — A study commission­ed by the environmen­tal group Greenpeace shows that over one-third of the busiest short-haul flights in Europe have viable train alternativ­es which are far less polluting.

The group called on European government­s Wednesday to boost train travel so fewer polluting planes are flying over the continent. The study by OBC Transeurop­a showed that 34% of the 150 busiest shorthaul flights have train trip alternativ­es of less than 6 hours.

The study, released ahead of a U.N. climate change summit that opens in Glasgow, Scotland on Sunday, highlighte­d some particular­ly problemati­c air routes, ones with flights the authors said can emit a dozen times more carbon dioxide than trains would.

The routes, including Madrid-Barcelona, Frankfurt-Berlin and Brussels-Amsterdam, could be covered by train in two to four hours, the study said.

“Europe could replace almost all of the top 250 short-haul flights and save some 23.4 million tons of CO2 per year, as much as the annual CO2 emissions of Croatia,” Greenpeace said.

The report said it would help if European Union government­s promoted train travel more, especially night trains, the report said.

Airlines argue that some short-haul flights are necessary because they are essential connection­s for longer-distance trips.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ In this 2014 file photo, a Austrian Airlines airplane takes off from the airport in Munich, southern Germany.
Associated Press ■ In this 2014 file photo, a Austrian Airlines airplane takes off from the airport in Munich, southern Germany.

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