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Friends of the Earth warn that airport expansion will undermine UK climate action

Tuesday, 30 June 2015

Commenting ahead of the Airports Commission report which is expected to recommend airport expansion at either Gatwick or Heathrow, Friends of the Earth’s head of campaigns Andrew Pendleton said: “It’s simply not credible for the Government to build a new runway in the South East and still claim to be serious about tackling climate change.  “Airport expansion will also have huge impacts on the local community, noise levels and air quality. We can’t preach to the world about stopping catastrophic climate change on the one hand and send aviation emissions soaring on the other.”
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Airport expansion will undermine UK climate action, warns Friends of the Earth

30.6.2015  (FoE press release)

Commenting ahead of Wednesday’s (1 July 2015) Davies Commission report which
is expected to recommend airport expansion at either Gatwick or Heathrow,
Friends of the Earth’s head of campaigns Andrew Pendleton said:

“It’s simply not credible for the Government to build a new runway in the
South East and still claim to be serious about tackling climate change.

“Airport expansion will also have huge impacts on the local community, noise
levels and air quality.

“We can’t preach to the world about stopping catastrophic climate change on
the one hand and send aviation emissions soaring on the other.”

ENDS

Notes to editors:

1. The case for expanding airport capacity is extremely weak. Taken together London’s five major airports serve more destinations than any other European city – over 360 with at least a weekly service – see [1] (section 2.5)

2. The Committee on Climate Change says 37.5Mt CO2 is an appropriate cap [2] for the UK’s aviation emissions in 2050 to fit with the Climate Change Act.

However even if capped at the level the CCC suggests:
•   aviation emissions would represent a quarter of total UK greenhouse gas emissions  [3] in 2050
•    [4 ]other sectors would have to cut emissions by 85% [5] rather than the average 80% needed overall by 2050

____________
http://www.foe.co.uk
info@foe.co.uk
020 7490 1555

[1]http://ift.tt/1C6YRgunt/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/138162/aviation-connectivity-and-the-economy.pdf
[2]http://ift.tt/1C6YPp002/19/climate-change-committee-is-airport-expansion-viable-when-emissions-are-capped/
[3]http://ift.tt/1C6YRgv09/29/environmental-policy-proposals-for-airport-expansion/
[4]http://ift.tt/1C6YRgv09/29/environmental-policy-proposals-for-airport-expansion/
[5]http://ift.tt/1C6YPp006/03/briefing-environmental-challenges-to-airport-expansion-in-the-south-east/

 

http://ift.tt/1C6YRgx

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Blog from The Carbon Brief: Aviation’s battle to limit rising emissions – maybe only by limiting demand growth

Tuesday, 30 June 2015

A huge question mark hangs over how the new runway would be compatible with the UK’s climate change targets. The key issue is not where a runway should be built, but whether it should be built at all.  A blog by the Carbon Brief discusses how the UK dilemma on this is a microcosm of the global story of rapid expansion in the aviation industry, at a time when emissions need to rapidly decrease.  Currently, UK aviation emissions are set to far exceed 2005 levels in 2050 – though the CCC has today reiterated that UK aviation must not emit more than around the 2005 level (about 37.5MtCO2 per year) by 2050.   Even if no new runways are built in the UK,  aviation CO2 emissions  may be at 47Mt in 2050, according to DfT statistics. Without a carbon price and if airport expansion is unconstrained, the CCC project that UK aviation demand could grow more than 200% between 2005 and 2050.  Globally, according to the UNFCCC, aviation emissions increased by 76.1% between 1990 and 2012.  Projections from ICAO indicate that CO2 emissions from global aviation are set to grow 200%-360% on current levels by 2050.  Reducing demand or, at the very least, reducing the growth in demand, may be the only way to keep the CO2 emissions down. The Carbon Brief adds: “If the UK government decides to give the go-ahead for a new runway, it will find it has a difficult task ahead in proving that it is not part of the problem.”

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Explainer: Aviation’s battle to limit rising emissions

30 June 2015 (Carbon Brief)

By Sophie Yeo

Tomorrow, the Airports Commission is expected to make its recommendation on how to expand the aviation industry in the UK.

Sir Howard Davies, the economist behind the report, has weighed up three options: a new runway at Heathrow, a new runway at Gatwick, and extending Heathrow’s northern runway.

But a question mark hangs over how the new runway would be compatible with the UK’s climate change targets, rendering it an issue of not where it should be built, but whether it should be built at all.

The UK’s dilemma is a microcosm of the global story of rapid expansion in the aviation industry, at a time when emissions need to rapidly decrease.

UK aviation emissions

Under the UK’s 2008 Climate Change Act, emissions must be reduced by 80% on 1990 levels by 2050.

In 2009, the government decided that aviation emissions must be capped at 2005 levels – 37.5 million tonnes of carbon dioxide (MtCO2) – by 2050. However, in 2012, it said it would not officially incorporate this target into its legally binding carbon budgets due to policy uncertainty at an international level.

Nonetheless, the government has informally left space within its carbon budgets to accommodate 37.5MtCO2 from the aviation sector in 2050.

Currently, aviation emissions are set to far exceed 2005 levels in 2050.  Even if no new runways are built in the UK,  aviation CO2 emissions are expected to be at 47Mt in 2050, according to statistics from the Department of Transport.

Without a carbon price and if airport expansion is unconstrained, aviation demand could grow more than 200% between 2005 and 2050, the Committee on Climate Change projects.

The chart (see image here) illustrates the growth in UK international aviation emissions between 1972 and 2012.

By the government’s own admission, expanding both Gatwick or Heathrow will push the UK beyond its target for aviation. In 2050, in a scenario where the UK meets its 37.5MtCO2 goal, Heathrow will be responsible for 16.6MtCO2, and Gatwick for 3.9MtCO2.

A new runway at Heathrow would add an extra 3.9MtCO2 to its baseline, or 1.4MtCO2 at Gatwick.

Global aviation emissions

Globally, aviation is one of the fastest growing sectors in terms of greenhouse gas emissions. According to the UN’s climate body, aviation emissions increased by 76.1% between 1990 and 2012.

In 2012, aeroplanes were responsible for 689MtCO2. By 2013, this had increased to 705MtCO2, according to analysis by the International Air Transport Association (IATA) of figures from the International Energy Agency (IEA).

This represents around 2% of global CO2 emissions – or around the same volume of CO2 emitted every year by Germany. This means that, if the aviation sector were a country, it would be the world’s seventh largest emitter.

Aviation’s contribution to climate change does not only lie in its CO2 emissions. Aeroplanes also emit water vapour, chemicals and other substances that can form contrails, changing the natural formation of clouds. These impact the overall energy balance of the planet, known as radiative forcing, which is what causes the global temperature to rise.

A special report into aviation by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in 1999 estimated that aeroplanes were responsible for 3.5% of total human-caused radiative forcing, excluding the impact of clouds.

International efforts

However, unlike a country, the aviation industry will not face a binding requirement to tackle its emissions at the UN climate talks in Paris this December, where a new international deal is set to be signed.

The draft of the text currently under negotiation passes responsibility for reducing aviation emissions to the International Civil Aviation Authority, a specialised agency of the UN.

ICAO has set several goals aimed at limiting and then reducing emissions from aviation. This includes the “aspirational” target of improving fuel efficiency by 2% every year, limiting emissions at 2020 levels and then reducing them to half of 2005 levels by 2050 – all non-binding.

Yet, according to ICAO’s 2013 projections, shown in the graph below, emissions from the aviation industry are set to grow 200%-360% on current levels by 2050, including the maximum use of lower-carbon alternative fuels. This is far in excess of the goal of carbon neutral growth from 2020.

ICAO’s crowning achievement would be the development of a global carbon market to limit emissions from the world’s aviation industry.

The 191 countries represented at ICAO have agreed to do this and have outlined some potential options for how such a mechanism could shape up.

One possibility is to use carbon offsets, which participants could buy to neutralise their emissions above an agreed limit. Another possibility is to do this, while simultaneously applying a charge for every tonne of CO2, generating a stream of revenue that can be used for other climate-related projects. The final possibility is to develop a cap-and-trade scheme for the industry.

But while the options are on the table, progress has been slow, held up by the inevitable political difficulties in attempting to implement the world’s first global carbon market for a certain sector.

Developing a market mechanism for aviation includes an added complication: establishingwhich emissions belong to which country. Some argue that countries ought to take responsibility for all emissions from the aeroplanes departing from their territory. Others say it should depend where the airline operator is registered. A third option is that countries should take responsibility for the CO2 emitted in their airspace.

At ICAO’s general assembly in 2013, countries reaffirmed that they would develop a market-based mechanism for the industry, and develop the options for doing so. A decision is due on this in 2016.

Technology

The markets offer one method of scaling down aviation emissions, but they are not the only answer. Technology, operational improvements and biofuels also offer opportunities for reducing aviation pollution.

From an operations perspective, this can mean advanced communications, navigation and surveillance, along with better air traffic management, which can reduce the amount of time that the plane spends in the air.

Technological improvements include more efficient engines, advanced lightweight materials and improved aerodynamics.

Biofuels can also be used as an alternative to traditional fuels – although the level of the benefits that they offer is contentious, due to possible competition for land with CO2-absorbing forests.

Nonetheless, developing a market-based mechanism for the aviation industry remains key if the aviation industry is going to achieve its own goals without dramatically reducing demand for flights.

These alternative approaches, known as the “basket of measures” in ICAO jargon, will not alone put the aviation industry on track to achieve carbon neutral growth after 2020, according to a paper by Professor David Lee, who leads the Centre for Aviation, Transport and the Environment at Manchester Metropolitan University.

It finds that applying new technology, advanced operational procedures, using more biofuel and extending out market mechanisms to 2050 cannot stop emissions growing. Under the maximum level of ambition that the researchers modelled, emissions would still rise to 774MtCO2 per year – more than today’s emissions of 705MtCO2.

The graph below shows the ranges of outcomes depending on how enthusiastically improvements to the industry are adopted.

The paper concluded that no currently available measures, or any combination of them, could achieve the goal of carbon neutral growth after 2020 for any scenario of the industry’s growth. But since regional markets have reduced emissions most effectively so far, it says, a global mechanism would be the most effective means to achieve this goal in the future.

Demand

There is one other way to cut aviation emissions: reduce demand – or, at the very least, reduce the growth in demand.

Unsurprisingly, this is the less popular option among countries and industries that want to see the continued expansion of aviation.

At its 2013 general assembly, ICAO emphasised “the need to ensure that international aviation continues to develop in a sustainable manner”.

A 2014 paper published in the journal Atmospheric Environment reinforced the point that improved airline efficiency will not be able to compensate for the growth in emissions that will result from increased demand.

In order to achieve an overall reduction in CO2 from the industry, “behaviour change will be necessary to reduce demand for air-travel”, it says. Reduced demand could be brought about by an increase in ticket price of around 1.4% per year, say the authors – reversing the current trend that has seen the price of international tickets fall by 0.5% per year between 1990 and 2012.

A study released in March 2015 by the Tyndall Centre suggests that climate scientists themselves should lead the way through shunning air travel, wherever possible.

The UK’s Committee on Climate Change says that national growth in aviation demand must be limited to 60% in order to meet the government’s target of keeping emissions in 2050 at 2005 levels.

In the UK, the majority of the industry’s growth has come from holiday makers, rather than business trips. The graph below shows that growth in business flights had started to flatline even before the financial crisis of 2008.

Reasons for UK passengers travelling abroad by air. Credit: Carbon Brief, based on ONS statistics

This undermines the argument made by some, such as former Conservative MP Tim Yeo, that there is a strong business case for a third runway.

Recently, a group of individuals from tax and environmental campaigning groups wrote a letter in The Observer backing instead a “frequent flyers levy”, which would tax travellers based on how regularly they fly. They wrote:

“Our research shows that this ‘polluter pays’ approach would enable the UK to meet our climate targets without making flying the preserve of the rich – and without needing to build any new runways.”

National action

While an international mechanism to reduce aviation emissions has yet to materialise, countries are increasingly taking action at the national level.

The EU has included aviation emissions within its Emissions Trading System, facing down fierce opposition, including some US airlines, who unsuccessfully fought a case against the Commission in the European Court of Justice in 2011.

The scheme only covers flights that both takeoff and land within the EU (and Iceland, Norway and Liechtenstein). The EU agreed to exclude international flights entering its airspace, in the hope that it would ease political tension and facilitate an agreement on a global market mechanism in 2016.

The US Environmental Protection Agency recently acknowledged the role of aviation emissions in causing global warming, and said it will develop rules in line with ICAO regulation to reduce emissions from the industry, as it has done for vehicles and power plants.

But while the EU, in particular, has shown leadership on this issue, national actions alone cannot tackle the enormous growth of the industry, and cannot compensate for the particularly fierce growth in developing countries. The burden to act first falls on developed countries, with ICAO recognising the UN principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities”.

For instance, between 1990 and 2012, emissions from the aviation industry grew 913% in Benin, 800% in Mongolia and 500% in Nepal. This compares to growth of 10% in Canada, 63% in the US and 84% in Germany.

overed by only weak regulation, and with the prospect of future reductions still shadowy, aviation is one of the most difficult issues of climate change policy. The methods to significantly reduce its emissions – a global market mechanism, or simply flying less – are unpopular and difficult to implement.

If the UK government decides to give the go-ahead for a new runway, it will find it has a difficult task ahead in proving that it is not part of the problem.

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See full article at

http://ift.tt/1IKpODB/

for many charts and graphs included.

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Gatwick MPs seek urgent assurances on Heathrow ministers’ involvement in airports decision

Tuesday, 30 June 2015

Crispin Blunt MP has called again on the Cabinet Secretary, Sir Jeremy Heywood, to make sure Ministers who have a constituency interest in the runways decision are not involved in the Government’s consideration of the Airports Commission report.  Sir Jeremy Heywood has responded to Crispin Blunt’s original letter of 10th June in which Gatwick Coordination Group (GCG) MPs (chaired by Crispin) sought assurances that the provisions on conflicts of interest in the Ministerial Code will apply to the many Ministers who have a constituency interest in opposing a new runway at Heathrow. Sir Jeremy’s letter is equivocal, saying “These matters are considered on a case-by-case basis, reflecting specific Ministerial responsibilities and the nature of any constituency interest. These Code provisions will of course apply to the Government’s response to the Airports Commission’s Final Report”. The GCG is concerned that this is not a clear response to the specific high profile case of the runway decision. Crispin Blunt’s reply to Sir Jeremy says there is seen to be a conflict between constituency interests of  Ministers, and the national interest.  These suggestions “…should be an affront to you as Cabinet Secretary. That you appear not to be in a position to address our concerns on this very high profile issue is a grave matter.”
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Gatwick MPs seek urgent assurances on Heathrow ministers’ involvement in airports decision

30.6.2015 (from Crispin Blunt, MP for Reigate)

Crispin Blunt MP has called again on the Cabinet Secretary, Sir Jeremy Heywood, to make sure Ministers who have a constituency interest in the national decision to be taken on airport expansion are not involved in the Government’s consideration of the Airports Commission report due to be published tomorrow.

Sir Jeremy Heywood has responded to Crispin Blunt’s letter of 10th June in which Gatwick Coordination Group MPs sought assurances that the provisions on conflicts of interest in the Ministerial Code will apply to Ministers who have a constituency interest in opposing a new runway at Heathrow.

Sir Jeremy’s letter is equivocal, saying “These matters are considered on a case-by-case basis, reflecting specific Ministerial responsibilities and the nature of any constituency interest. These Code provisions will of course apply to the Government’s response to the Airports Commission’s Final Report”.

The Gatwick Coordination Group is concerned that this is not a clear response to the specific high profile case of the imminent Airports Commission report.

In his reply, Crispin Blunt asks for Sir Jeremy to reconsider his response and says:

“The Government’s consideration of the Airports Commission report will be a matter of great national importance. The existence of explicit and expressed constituency interests of senior members of the Government is a matter of record. So much so that part of the case being made by the promoters of development at Gatwick rather than Heathrow is the existence of these interests rather than the national interest.

“It disgraces basic tenets of transparent and good governance that these suggestions can be made. They should be an affront to you as Cabinet Secretary. That you appear not to be in a position to address our concerns on this very high profile issue is a grave matter.”

In his letter, Crispin Blunt describes the suggestion implied in Sir Jeremy’s letter that the Ministerial Code only applies to Ministers’ decision-making within departments and not when involved in collective Government consideration as “a risible proposition, if it was not so serious as to significantly prejudice the national interest in this instance.”

http://ift.tt/1GMgOxf


Letter from Crispin Blunt on behalf of the Gatwick Coordination Group to Sir Jeremy Heywood, 30th June,

Crispin Blunt MP to Sir Jeremy Heywood 30 June 2015


Letter from Sir Jeremy Heywood to Crispin Blunt, 29th June

Cabinet Secretary response to Crispin Blunt MP 29 June 2015


Letter from Crispin Blunt on behalf of the Gatwick Coordination Group to Sir Jeremy Heywood, 10th June

Crispin Blunt MP to Sir Jeremy Heywood 10 June 2015

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The reply from Sir Jeremy Heywood just said:

Sir Jeremy Heywood must have taken lessons on the art of the evasive reply from Sir Humphrey Appleby, who would have been proud of his pupil.


 



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Committee on Climate Change confirm aviation CO2 must remain capped – putting new runway into question

Tuesday, 30 June 2015

On the eve of the Airports Commission’s runway recommendation, the Committee on Climate Change (CCC) has told Government it has until 2016 to set out an effective plan for limiting aviation emissions. The Government’s official advisory body on delivery of the UK’s Climate Change Act used its 5th ‘Progress Report’ to Government to highlight the need for action on aviation, including constraints on demand.  The CCC says that given the anticipated growth in emissions from the sector, the DfT must set out how it will ensure that emissions from aviation are no higher in 2050 than they were in 2005 (37.5 Mt).  The limited scope for improvements in aviation technology mean that demand growth must be kept to no more than 60% above its 2005 level. Current forecasts of air passenger growth with associated CO2 emissions exceed this level EVEN WITHOUT adding a new runway. With a new SE runway the growth in passenger demand – and thus CO2 emissions – would be even higher.  Extensive analysis by the AEF has shown that a new runway would make the aviation emissions cap (37.5MtCO2 annually) impossible to achieve. Ruling out a new runway is the most obvious first step for the Government to take in response to the CCC’s advice. Adding a runway, and then having to deal with the extra carbon problem it has produced, is not an efficient way to deal with the issue.
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Runway recommendation under threat by Climate Committee report: AEF comment

On the eve of the Airports Commission’s runway recommendation, the Committee on Climate Change (CCC) today told Government it has until 2016 to set out an effective plan for limiting aviation emissions. The Government’s official advisory body on delivery of the UK’s Climate Change Act used its 5th ‘Progress Report’ [1] to Government to highlight the need for action on aviation, including constraints on demand.

Given the anticipated growth in emissions from the sector, the Department for Transport must set out how it will ensure that emissions from aviation are no higher in 2050 than they were in 2005 (37.5 Mt), the CCC states in its advice to ministers. The limited scope for improvements in aviation technology mean that demand growth must be limited to no more than 60% above its 2005 level. Current forecasts exceed this level even without adding new airport capacity and a new runway would increase passenger growth still further.

Cait Hewitt from Aviation Environment Federation, the leading UK environmental NGO campaigning on the environmental impacts of airports and flying, said:

The CCC’s report highlights the need for Government intervention to manage aviation demand just at the time when a decision on new airport capacity is looming. Our work has shown, a new runway would make the aviation emissions cap impossible to achieve in the real world.

“Ruling out South East airport expansion is the most obvious first step for the Government to take in response to today’s advice from the CCC. At the very least it must postpone a decision on a new runway until after it has published an emissions action plan for aviation.”

While the CCC’s recommendations for limiting aviation emissions are not new, the specific requirement to set out a plan for achieving them will put new pressure on the Government as it considers the recommendation of the Airports Commission. Even with current runway capacity, emissions are currently forecast to overshoot the maximum level CCC say is permissible. A new runway at either Heathrow or Gatwick would significantly increase the scale of the challenge[2], as the Airports Commission’s own modelling has shown.

As set out in the report we published earlier this month[3], the only options for tackling CO2 from the sector if expansion was approved at either Heathrow or Gatwick would be draconian restrictions on regional airports or large increases in the cost of flying to manage demand. In reality, neither approach would be deliverable.

—ENDS—

Notes to Editors

For more information contact the AEF office on 020 3102 1509.

The Aviation Environment Federation is the leading UK organisation campaigning exclusively on the environmental impacts of aviation. We represent community groups and individuals around many of the UK’s airports and airfields. Further information can be found on our website:www.aef.org.uk

[1] The Committee on Climate Change’s 5th Progress report is available here: http://ift.tt/Hl0mYhpublication/reducing-emissions-and-preparing-for-climate-change-2015-progress-report-to-parliament/ See Table A.1 Recommendation 19 in ‘Summary of Recommendations’ on Page 41 and page 145 of main report

[2] View our infographic demonstrating future emissions forecasts with expansion at Heathrow and Gatwick here:http://ift.tt/1GLYh4916/infographic-why-airport-expansion-risks-the-uks-climate-change-commitments/

[3] Our report is available here: http://ift.tt/1GLYh4b19/aviation-emissions-to-soar-under-airports-commission-proposals-new-aef-report-shows/



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London City Airport considering a Compulsory Purchase of Royal Docks Waterway and land

Sunday, 28 June 2015

London City Airport have notified the GLA and the Planning Inspectorate they are considering Compulsory Purchase Order against the Mayor of London to own the nearly 20 hectares of land and Royal Docks Waterway, which it needs for its huge expansion plans. The airport has discussed these plans with the DfT with a view that any CPO be considered at the Planning Inspectorates Public Inquiry into the Mayor’s expansion refusal. That inquiry is due to be heard in the first quarter of 2016. The enquiry could be extended to consider the CPO. The publicly owned land is the responsibility of the London Mayor.  The Docks are part of the Blue Ribbon Network protected by the London Plan. A 3-week consultation into the purchase would also have to be carried out. An attempted land grab by London City Airport’s hedge fund owners, GIP, would be unprecedented – if approved  -and could see all the Mayor’s Public land assets under attack from private developers. GIP is understood to be keen to sell London City Airport soon, but want planning consent for expansion first, to increase the price to perhaps£1.25 billion. GIP also want a 2nd Gatwick runway. Both would raise the price at sale. 
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London City Airport considering a Compulsory Purchase of Royal Docks Waterway and land from Mayor of London Boris Johnson

26.6.2015 (Stop City Airport Masterplan)

London City Airport have notified the GLA and the Planning Inspectorate they are considering Compulsory Purchase Order against the Mayor of London Boris Johnson to own the nearly 20 hectares of land and Royal Docks Waterway which it needs for its huge expansion.

The Airport has discussed these plans with the Department of Transport with a view that any CPO be considered at the Planning Inspectorates Public Enquiry into the Mayor’s expansion refusal.

The CPO could make up part of the Planning Inspectorate Public Enquiry into that expansion refusal due to be heard in the first quarter of 2016. The enquiry could be extended to consider the Purchase.

The publicly owned land is the responsibility of the London Mayor.  The Docks are part of the Blue Ribbon Network protected by the London Plan. A three week consultation into the purchase would also have to be carried out.

An attempted land grab by London City Airports hedge fund owners, Global Infrastructure Partners would be unprecedented if approved and could see all the Mayor’s Public land assets under attack from private developers.

It is widely believed that London City Airport’s owners GIP are desperate to sell the airport with planning consent, to push the value over £1.25 billion mark. Currently the airport would not fetch much more than the £742m, the price GIP paid in 2006.

Global Infrastructure Partners are also the owners of Gatwick and plan to build a second runway at the airport.

Alan Haughton @stopcityairport said

“The sheer unfettered greed of London City Airport for expansion is undiminished even after the Mayors rightful refusal. To now consider the CPO of public land only shows the depths that these hedge funds will go to to sweat their assets for incredible profits. Global Infrastructure Partners are showing their true colours and residents, politicians and the Davies Commission should take note when considering a second runway at Gatwick.”

Link to Inspectorate application

 

http://ift.tt/1y3nhB9

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See earlier:

London City Airport challenges Boris’ decision to block its expansion plans, over ‘noise ghetto’ fears

Boris Johnson blocked London City Airport’s expansion plans in late March, as he said it would create a “noise ghetto” for people living under the flight path. Now, as expected, London City Airport has appealed to the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, Greg Clark, against the decision. On March 26th Boris ordered Newham council to reject the plans on the grounds of noise disturbance and because the airport was intended for business rather than leisure. Under the plans, take-offs and landings were expected to increase from 70,000 a year to 111,000,with passenger numbers doubling to 6 million by 2023. It would also be able to accommodate larger planes, (and be more profitable). This coupled with the airport’s plans to use new PBN technology to create a much narrower and concentrated flight corridor over Wanstead, Leytonstone and Leyton had prompted fears that noise could become an issue. The airport says it is appealing because of the jobs it creates, and its economic impact. The decision by Greg Clark could take 5 months.

Click here to view full story…

Newham Council lacks the bravery of Boris to turn down unsuitable developments like City Airport expansion

On Saturday 25th April there was a local celebration party for people living in the Royal Docks area, close to London City Airport. They held their party to celebrate the fact that the London Mayor Boris Johnson had overturned Newham Council’s decision to grant permission for London City airport to expand. Local children have formed a lively choir, and they entertained the assembled guests. People who suffer from the noise from the airport are delighted that Boris has helped them, and opposed the airport’s environmentally-destructive plans that have been backed by the (Labour) Newham council. Though Newham argues that the airport would bring jobs for local people and local economic benefits, it actually provides little of either. No more than about 500 Newham residents are employed directly by the airport. The business passengers don’t linger round the airport, but head off to business meetings in the City or the West End. It was clear at Saturday’s event that the local community regards the airport on their doorstep not as a benefit but as problem which brings noise, air pollution and blight. They feel they might be better off with something else there. Compared to the nearby Excel Centre it provides far fewer jobs or wider economic benefit.

Click here to view full story…

Boris turns down London City Airport expansion plans on noise grounds

Boris Johnstone, the Mayor of London, has refused London City Airport’s plan to expand on noise grounds. In a letter he has instructed Newham Council, who had approved the application, to refuse it. The Mayor says the application does not “adequately mitigate and manage its adverse noise impacts.” Newham’s decision was always dependent on the Mayor’s approval. London City Airport wanted permission to build new taxiways to permit larger planes to use the airport. It also wanted more car parking spaces. The decision will be a bitter blow to the airport as it will now no longer be able to bring in the larger planes it wanted to serve new destinations. John Stewart, chair of HACAN East, which campaigned against the expansion plans, said “The airport is paying the price for being so cavalier about noise. Quite simply, Boris did not believe its claims that it was dealing adequately with noise. We salute his decision”. The decision appears to be final, and it is unclear whether London City Airport can appeal to the Secretary of State. They may do so.

Click here to view full story…



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Most Londoners think London has enough airport capacity already – and no runway is needed

Saturday, 27 June 2015

An opinion poll has shown that the vast majority of Londoners think London already has an adequate level of airport capacity for a major global city, new opinion research has found.  A poll by ComRes was commissioned by the London Chamber of Commerce and Industry, found that only 24% of people living in London believe the capital’s airport capacity is inadequate, while 63% say it meets or exceeded their expectations. But the Airports Commission is expected to recommend another runway. The new polling research found that all age groups, social classes, genders, and regions of London believe that runway capacity was in line with their expectations. In a parallel survey, most London businesses also believe that airport capacity met their expectations, albeit by a smaller margin of 52% to 37%. Londoners polled were far more concerned about the availability of housing, with 70% of residents and 74% per cent of bosses saying it was important. Local transport infrastructure was also a far greater concern than airport capacity. London has the largest airport system of any city in the world, with passenger traffic outstripping New York and Tokyo by millions every year. Around 11% of flights abroad are accounted for by business travel.
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Most Londoners think the capital has enough airport capacity already

A Government-backed commission is set to recommend an increase in capacity, however

By JON STONE (Independent)

26 June 2015

The vast majority of Londoners think the capital already has an adequate level of airport capacity for a major global city, new opinion research has found.

A poll by ComRes found that only 24 per cent of people living in London believe the capital’s airport capacity is inadequate, while 63 per cent say it meets or exceeded their expectations.

The finding comes weeks before the expected publication of the Davies Review into air travel in the capital, which is expected to recommend an increase.

“Additional capacity will need to be provided,” the commission’s chair Sir Howard Davies told the Independent in 2013.

The review, commissioned before the election, has seen both Heathrow and Gatwick airports hire extensive lobbying and public relations operations to vie to be the favoured option.

But the new research, commissioned by the London Chamber of Commerce and Industry, found that all age groups, social classes, genders, and regions of London believe that capacity was in line with their expectations.

In a parallel survey, most London businesses also believe that airport capacity met their expectations, albeit by a smaller margin of 52 per cent to 37 per cent.

The same poll found that the sufficient availability of housing was by far the bigger investment priority for Londoners, with 70 per cent of residents and 74 per cent of bosses saying it was important.

Local transport infrastructure was also a far greater concern than airport capacity.

Around 11 per cent of flights abroad are accounted for by business travel; London has the largest airport system of any city in the world, with passenger traffic outstripping New York and Tokyo by millions every year.

It is currently served by Heathrow, Gatwick, Luton, Stansted and London City airports, with a new terminal and extended runway already built at Southend in recent years.

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A Comres  survey in May in 2015

ComRes interviewed 510 London business decision makers online between 7th and 20th May 2015. Data were weighted to be representative of all London businesses by company size and broad industry sector.  It asked whether delaying a number of government actions (for example, Crossrail, HS2, changes to business rates, or implementing the Airports Commission recommendation) would have an impact on their business.

For most, the implementation of the Airports Commission recommendation was not considered to be important for their business.

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US airline industry lobby, A4A, hoping it will not need to make further CO2 savings – more NextGen instead

Saturday, 27 June 2015

The trade lobbying group, Airlines for America (A4A), argues that the airline industry has already done its part to reduce CO2 emissions. It says it is now up to the US government to get improvements to the air traffic control system that could reduce airline fuel consumption, by cutting extra miles flown. Recently the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) released an “endangerment finding” that that greenhouse gases from aircraft pose a risk to human health. So A4A is pushing back, and saying that US airlines have “more than doubled fuel efficiency since 1978 [planes were very fuel inefficient then].” Leaving out the constantly rising numbers of flights and passengers, they hope to persuade government that there is no need to have any further regulations on their carbon emissions, or emissions standards for aircraft. While the industry hopes for 1.5% efficiency gains per year, this would be negated by its hopes of growing by 4% per year.  There is the issue of whether the US and the EU might have different emissions standards, and how that affects trans-Atlantic flights. Airlines are thriving, the fuel price has fallen, and they are making profits. But the industry wants more flight path changes, to cut costs, through NextGen, which have proved so unpopular in subjecting communities to worse noise.
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US airline industry, government at odds over emissions standards

By Danny King (Travel Weekly)

June 24, 2015

As the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) moves to catch up with overseas regulators by enacting emissions standards for the aviation industry, the largest U.S. airline trade group is pushing back.

The trade group, Airlines for America (A4A), argues that the industry has already done its part to reduce emissions and that it now is up to the government to address improvements to the air traffic control system that could further reduce airline fuel consumption.

Just weeks after the EPA reported that its early findings confirmed that aircraft carbon dioxide emissions contribute to global warming, A4A was gearing up for a lobbying effort that will highlight both the industry’s fuel-efficiency gains and the need for the federal government to update aircraft-control systems. A4A is pointing to data suggesting that U.S. carriers have more than doubled fuel efficiency since 1978 and that airlines account for 5% of the U.S. economy, but just 2% of the country’s emissions.

“The U.S. airlines carried 20% more passengers and cargo in 2014 than they did in 2000, while emitting 8% less carbon dioxide,” A4A spokesman Vaughn Jennings said. “Coupled with the long-term fuel efficiency improvements the U.S. airlines have accomplished [dating] back to the late 1970s, there is a real question as to whether any [greenhouse-gas] emissions regulation is needed.”

As it is, the EPA appears to be following up efforts by the United Nations’ International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), which has been trying to address the issue of aircraft emissions for at least five years and is pushing for the global aircraft industry to boost fuel-efficiency by 1.5% a year through 2020. ICAO is working with the industry to develop aircraft emissions standards, which could be disclosed as soon as early next year.

One burning question for airlines is whether the EPA’s move toward emissions standards would end up creating a system in which different emissions mandates would apply to aircraft flying in Europe and those flying in North America. Similar conflicting standards already exist in the global automobile industry. And it’s not clear which standard would then apply for aircraft used for transatlantic flights.

In a June 10 statement, the EPA said it was pursuing policies “that are equitable across national boundaries,” but it did not explain what that meant or offer further detail. Meanwhile, Jennings said it was “critical” that international emissions standards be common.

Bob Offutt, senior technology analyst at Phocuswright, said that while it was unclear which standards would apply on transatlantic flights, he expected them to be similar, with the greatest potential for differences arising with when the emissions standards would be phased in.

Regardless, Offutt said the EPA’s timing is no accident. The concept of aircraft pollution and its potential impact on global weather patterns have been discussed in scientific journals since at least 9/11, when, in the days following those terrorist attacks, flights were grounded, offering a chance to test theories on the impact of aircraft emissions.

Even so, in the ensuing years as the aviation industry was riddled by lackluster customer demand and higher fuel costs, the EPA appears to have taken a hands-off approach to the issue of aircraft emissions and their potential impact on global warming.

What has changed in recent years is that fuel prices will have fallen 20% between 2013 and 2015, while worldwide passenger departures will increase 6.8% this year, to 3.53 billion, and air transport will boost passenger revenue by 4.3% this year, to $823 billion, according to IATA.

As a result, many U.S. airlines are reporting record profits. United reported net income of $1.13 billion last year, compared with a $723 million net loss in 2012, while American Airlines earned net income of $2.88 billion in 2014, compared with a $1.88 billion loss two years prior.

“The airlines had complained that they were struggling. This is old news, of course,” Offutt said. “The EPA may have been holding off for a while so that [the airlines] could be profitable. Now, the EPA is saying, ‘your turn.'”

Indeed, the EPA noted in its June 10 statement about addressing aircraft greenhouse-gas emissions that U.S. aircraft account for 29% of global aircraft emissions as well as about 11% of emissions from the domestic transportation sector.

“In 2009, EPA determined that GHG [grenhouse-gas] pollution from cars and light trucks threatens Americans’ health and welfare by leading to long-lasting changes in our climate that can have a range of negative effects. The body of science on human-induced climate change has strengthened, supporting today’s proposed finding … that GHGs emitted from aircraft engines contribute to pollution that causes climate change endangering public health and welfare.”

While the airlines have not denied those assertions, A4A has already made it clear that the industry feels that a large part of solution to the emissions problem lies with the country’s outdated air traffic control system, which damages the industry’s efficiency. A replacement Gen-3 system has long been a political football in Congress. The airlines and A4A will likely use the EPA data in their push for the government to transition from an outdated radar-based infrastructure to a satellite-based GPS.

“While the A4A airlines are doing all that they can to promote efficiencies within the current air traffic management system, the limitations of that system account for over 10% of unnecessary fuel burn and resulting emissions,” Jennings said.

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See earlier:

After EPA “endangerment finding” USA starting to take CO2 emissions from aviation seriously

The Obama administration has now released a scientific finding from the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that greenhouse gases from aircraft pose a risk to human health. This is called an “endangerment finding” and it paves the way for regulating CO2 emissions from the US aviation industry.  It would allow the US to implement a global CO2 emissions standard for new aircraft, that is being developed by ICAO.  However, the ICAO CO2 standard will only start in late 2016 and only apply to new plane designs certified from 2020, leaving most of the world’s existing fleets unaffected for years to come.  But James Lees, from AEF, writing in a blog, says this EPA move could mark a turning point in efforts to regulate CO2 emissions from aviation globally.  While most sectors are expected to cut their emissions, the CO2 from aviation is expected to triple by 2050. Today’s airline fleet is more carbon efficient than it was in the early 1970s but efficiency improvements slowed down dramatically since 2000 – while passenger demand grows at 5.5% per year. It is hoped the UK, the EU and the US can now push for an effective global standard.

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Heathrow and Gatwick CEOs both say their runway campaigns will go on, whatever Commission recommends

Friday, 26 June 2015

The CEOs of Heathrow and Gatwick both say they will continue their campaigns for expansion, whatever the Airports Commission recommends (next week?). Holland-Kaye is trying to make out that Heathrow’s plans for a 3rd runway had been so substantially altered since David Cameron blocked them in 2010 that “the prime minister could defend a decision to change his mind.” (The changes are small – different location, better compensation offers, more attempts to overcome local opposition … same need to destroy communities, make areas almost uninhabitable, immense increase in noise and air pollution etc etc). Gatwick keep attempting to persuade people their runway is more deliverable than Heathrow’s. Both fear the report ending up on a shelf, gathering dust.  Heathrow expansion is environmentally and politically just about impossible, but it is what the airlines, the industry and its backers want. Holland-Kaye said Heathrow would not give up pressing for another runway even if the Commission recommends Gatwick. “It’s not a binding report … we’d have to wait and see. A decision hasn’t been made and to some extent the campaigns will keep on going.” As one commentator remarked: “… the most likely final resting place for Sir Howard’s report is a dusty shelf, somewhere in Whitehall.”
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Davies report won’t stop our campaigns, say Heathrow and Gatwick chiefs

Airport bosses vow to keep pushing for their expansion plans, no matter what commission set up by David Cameron decides

By Gwyn Topham,  Transport correspondent  (Guardian)

25.6.2015

The bosses of Heathrow and Gatwick airports say they will continue their campaigns for expansion, whatever the outcome of a long-awaited report on the future of air travel around London.

Heathrow’s chief executive said its plans for a third runway had been so substantially altered since David Cameron blocked them in 2010 that the prime minister could defend a decision to change his mind.

But Gatwick’s boss said he believed the airports commission, chaired by Sir Howard Davies, would favour his plans because they were more easily delivered than those of Heathrow, which are bedevilled by strong political and community opposition.

“People are starting to major on deliverablity,” said Stewart Wingate, the Gatwick chief executive. “We’re expecting that Davies, rather than making the same mistake as in the past, which saw a report gathering dust, will choose the only deliverable option.”

Both said they would continue their campaigns after publication of the commission’s report, which is expected next week. Expansion at the west London hub is favoured by most airlines but is politically fraught. Cameron personally made an unequivocal pledge to stop the third runway going ahead, overturning planning permission in 2010.

John Holland-Kaye, Heathrow’s chief executive, said the plans had completely changed since then, with the new proposal designed around sustainability, noise and air quality targets.

“We’ve changed our plans to meet the concerns of politicians. This is such a different plan, politicians can get behind it. When the facts change, politicians are entitled to take a different position,” he said.

Holland-Kaye said the company had listened to the concerns of Cameron, as well as those of London’s mayor, Boris Johnson, and would now invest hundreds of millions of pounds in improved insulation for local residents and cutting emissions, as well as limiting the effects of noise by building the runway further west.

Despite the launch of a renewed campaign of opposition by prominent Conservatives including Justine Greening and Zac Goldsmith, Holland-Kaye said he was “not particularly worried. We always knew where people like that would stand and they’d use their power to oppose the issue”.

He said support had come from businesses and politicians around Britain, including some Labour contenders for mayor of London. “We’ve never been in this position before,” he said.

Holland-Kaye added that Heathrow would not give up its campaign for another runway even if the commission prefers Gatwick. “It’s not a binding report … we’d have to wait and see. A decision hasn’t been made and to some extent the campaigns will keep on going.

“The problem won’t go away, the issue of getting to growth markets will still exist. Expanding Gatwick won’t change that. All that will happen is that other hub airports in Europe will get our growth.”

Gatwick pointed to changing plane technology and the growth of low-cost long-haul to support its case that future flights will be point to point. Annual financial results revealed on Thursday showed a 7% growth in passengers, with more than 40 million people forecast to fly through the airport this year.

The Heathrow boss Holland-Kaye claimed that a runway would deliver 180,000 jobs and £211bn – the top end of figures cited by the commission – and was confident that the verdict would go his way when Davies reports. “We know that he’s bold and he’s logical and he will recommend what he sees to be right – if you want to be connected to all the markets in the world, it’s got to be Heathrow.”

But Wingate countered: “You only get the economic benefits if it gets built. If Davies says Heathrow, it’ll be a travesty for the UK – it simply won’t happen. History tells us that no matter how many times we go down this route, it won’t happen.”

The commission led by Davies was established by the prime minister in 2012 to examine the need for additional airport capacity in south-east England, with a brief to report after this year’s general election. It has shortlisted two proposals at Heathrow, the airport’s own and another plan from the Heathrow Hub group to lengthen an existing runway, as well as Gatwick’s proposal for a second runway.

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“But as we have seen before, the most likely final resting place for Sir Howard’s report is a dusty shelf, somewhere in Whitehall.”

Philip Johnston, Telegraph.  Link 

 



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Andrew Simms: “Forget Heathrow and Gatwick expansion, the Davies report should tackle frequent flyers”

Friday, 26 June 2015

 

Forget Heathrow and Gatwick expansion, the Davies report should tackle frequent flyers

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Adrian Pepper: Aviation expansion – and the perils of going for Gatwick

Wednesday, 24 June 2015

In a blog for Conservative Home, Adrian Pepper sets out some of the reasons why a runway at Gatwick would be unwise – and deeply opposed. These include: due to the low unemployment rate, the need for thousands of homes in countryside, for the inward migration; need for massive investment in road and rail infrastructure; awareness of unacceptability of a Gatwick choice, just to east the strains with the Tory Cabinet; strong opposition from the area’s local Conservative councils, conservation area preservation groups and the little platoons that have been spontaneously springing up, CAGNE, ESSCAN, GON etc; the scale of the nationwide opposition that would happen; big business wants a hub at Heathrow; regional businesses and tourism in the regions want frequent access to a hub airport and they want Heathrow; there would be protests from MPs representing Northern Ireland, Wales, the Midlands, the North and Scotland; “They will castigate David Cameron and his Government for pandering to middle class metropolitan sensibilities, rather than listening to the nation at large” … and “Even after the Davies report has been issued, we are going to be none the wiser as to where the new runway will be built.”
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Adrian Pepper: Aviation expansion – the perils of going for Gatwick

By Adrian Pepper (Conservative Home)

23.6.2015

Adrian Pepper is Managing Director of Pepper Media. He is a former Special Adviser and Parliamentary Candidate. He stood for the Conservatives in the South East Region in last year’s European elections.
The Airports Commission led by Sir Howard Davies will shortly recommend which of two London airports – Gatwick or Heathrow – should be given the right to build a new runway. The vacuum left by his impressively leak-free Commission has been filled by media speculation as to whether the politicians will act on his recommendations.

In one journal, we may read that David Cameron is said to be warming to Gatwick; in another, George Osborne is reported to favour backing business’ preferred option of Heathrow. Zac Goldsmith’s threat to resign from Parliament if the latter gets the nod has conveniently coincided with his preferred decision to run for Mayor of London, which might end up with him leaving the Commons anyway. And, as for Boris, his freedom to fulfil his pledge to lie in front of the steamrollers building Heathrow’s third runway will be circumscribed by the doctrine of collective Ministerial responsibility, assuming he takes a job in Cameron’s Government in a year’s time.

Over the past two years, I have had the chance to canvass residents’ opinions in numerous constituencies near both Heathrow and Gatwick airports. When you talk to people about local issues, it is remarkable how few people spontaneously mention aviation expansion even as an issue of concern to them. It does not register on a scale of their political priorities (which is topped by the economy, immigration and the NHS.)

If you raise the issue with residents, you discover that the vast majority of people support aviation expansion in principle – a view that, since the establishment of the Airports Commission, has also been shared by the Conservative Party. [That is probably untrue for people close to, and affected by, airports – unless they work for the industry.  AW note].

In some West London constituencies, you discover that there are at least as many residents who quietly support the expansion of Heathrow as residents who loudly oppose it. You might not believe this by listening to their elected representatives, but many of them have succumbed to sustained pressure from a well-organised protest movement against Heathrow which has had years to establish itself. There is no grassroots movement in favour of expansion – just a silent majority who recognise that a big global city like London needs a big hub airport to serve its needs. [This is also probably not true. Surveys in 2013 in Hounslow, Hillingdon and Richmond found huge opposition to a Heathrow runway.  Link.  AW note]. 

In some constituencies near Heathrow, such as Spelthorne, the jobs argument outweighs any concerns about noise or air quality. There are more votes in defending the jobs of constituents who work in aviation and related industries than in letting them move elsewhere.

If Gatwick were expanded, many jobs would move there. Yet the area around Gatwick is one where there is already low unemployment – so the change would mean inward migration and the building of 40,000 new homes in the Surrey and Sussex countryside.

That explains in part why, around Gatwick, opposition to expansion of the local airport among voters is significantly more widespread, and the conviction runs much deeper among local residents. They fear that an expanded Gatwick would require a massive investment in new road and rail infrastructure. The airport is served by just one motorway, the M23 (accessed via the M25), and one train line (to Brighton); whereas people get to and from Heathrow via the M40, M4, M25 and M3 as well as by tube, rail, Crossrail and, in due course, HS2.

Right now, the Gatwick opposition campaign – like the residents themselves – is much more understated than Heathrow’s. But it should not be underestimated.

We have already seen a group of backbench Conservative MPs led Crispin Blunt, a former Minister, demand of the Chief Whip that Ministers local to both airports should recuse themselves from involvement in the Government’s final decision.  Link

If Gatwick is recommended by Davies, we will also be hearing a lot more in the months to come from the area’s local Conservative councils, conservation area preservation groups and the little platoons that have been spontaneously springing up : Communities Against Gatwick Noise and Emissions (CAGNE), the High Weald Parishes Aviation Action Group, the East Sussex Campaign against Noise, and Gatwick Obviously Not – to name but a few.

A Reuters report recently quoted a claim that if Davies opts for Gatwick, the Conservatives will pop the champagne corks and come out and announce that Gatwick will expand tomorrow. But if Ministers think that opting for Gatwick is going to be politically any more palatable than Heathrow, they underestimate the scale of nationwide opposition that they will encounter.

Opposition to Gatwick expansion does not stop in the rural southern Home Counties. Big business wants a hub at Heathrow.

Regional businesses and tourism in the regions rely on frequent access to a hub airport too – and that can only mean expanding Heathrow. If the Government chooses Gatwick, we should expect to see protests from MPs representing Northern Ireland, Wales, the Midlands and the North of England as well as Scotland. They will castigate David Cameron and his Government for pandering to middle class metropolitan sensibilities, rather than listening to the nation at large.

The point of asking independent experts on the Airports Commission to reach a verdict was to take politics out of this issue. Yet now the Government is offering a further six months of consultation after the Commission has reported.

We are about to witness a fractious political tussle, which will overshadow the calm and thorough process of deliberation that Sir Howard Davies has been leading. Even after the Davies report has been issued, we are going to be none the wiser as to where the new runway will be built.

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“Government airbrushes aviation’s non-CO2 greenhouse gas emissions” – new report

Wednesday, 24 June 2015

It been recognised for many years that the climate change impacts of aviation extend well beyond those of carbon dioxide (CO2), due to jet fuel being burned at high altitude, creating a range of impacts – including formation of cirrus cloud from contrails.  But this fact is largely ignored by the government and its agencies. A new report, produced for AirportWatch, examines the reasons for this and proposes an ‘index’ which will help to ensure that the issue of non-CO2 gases is properly accounted for. Though DECC continues to use a multiplier of 1.9 for the CO2 alone, in its conversion factors, the issue of the non-CO2 impacts has been systematically downplayed by the UK government and its associates over recent years. While ‘scientific uncertainty’ is claimed as the reason to ignore non-CO2, the report considers the real reason is that aviation emissions are an embarrassment to government and others who want to expand airports and air travel. The new paper suggests a new index should be developed. To be very conservative, this should be set at a multiplier of 1.6 of the CO2 emissions alone. It would be an interim measure, pending a thorough and independent review of the issue of aviation’s non-CO2 emissions. Ignoring the non-CO2 impacts of aviation, due to scientific uncertainty, is not acceptable. Using lack of certainty as a justification for ignoring a known issue would not be accepted in other areas. 
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“Government airbrushes aviation’s non-CO2 greenhouse gas emissions”

By Nic Ferriday, for AirportWatch

June 2015
1. Introduction

While it been recognised for many years that the climate change impacts of aviation extend well beyond those of carbon dioxide (CO2), this fact is largely ignored by the government and its agencies. Our report examines the reasons for this and proposes an ‘index’ which will help to ensure that the issue of non-CO2 gases is properly accounted for.
2. Executive summary

In recent years there has been systematic downplaying of the issue of non-CO2 gases by the UK government and its associates. This report provides the evidence for that claim.

While ‘scientific uncertainty’ is claimed as the reason to ignore non-CO2, the real reason is that aviation emissions are an embarrassment to government and others who want to expand airports and air travel.

In earlier governmental and academic studies a ‘Radiative Forcing Index’ (RFI) has been used in order to capture non-CO2 impacts. However, RFI is a ‘backward looking metric’ and is therefore considered unsuitable for informing aviation policy.

This report argues that instead of just dropping the previously used RFI, it should be replaced by a ‘Global Warming Potential’ (GWP) index for estimating impacts and developing policy responses.

A rough value for the index of 1.6 is estimated. CO2 emissions should be multiplied by 1.6 in order to allow for the impact on non-CO2 GHGs. This is a very conservative figure – the true figure could be much higher, due mainly to cirrus.

The estimate and calculations around it are very approximate. The factor of 1.6 should therefore be regarded very much as an interim, pending a thorough and independent review of the issue of aviation’s non-CO2 emissions.

Although the proposed index is approximate and interim, it should be used forthwith in order to demonstrate impacts and inform policy. Citing scientific uncertainly as a justification for ignoring an issue would not be acceptable in other fields of public policy and should not be accepted when it comes to aviation emissions.

AirportWatch Briefing on Radiative Forcing June 2015


 

11. Discussion

The material presented above gives clear evidence of a progressive downplaying of the impacts of aviation’s non-CO emissions by DfT, CCC and latterly AC.  Their documents recognise that non-CO2 emissions are significant but then simply ignore them or give excuses for ignoring them.

There seem to be two main arguments given for ignoring non-CO2 GHGs.  Firstly that RFI is an inappropriate metric.  Secondly, that the science is uncertain.  We examine these below.

It is argued by Lee and others that the use of RFI is inappropriate because it is a ‘backward-looking’ metric.  It tends to over-emphasise the impacts of non-CO2 gases because the residence time of those gases is less than CO2.  That RFI is a backward-looking metric and that some ‘forward-looking’ metric is better is common ground.  However, this recognition is nothing new and so does not explain the progressive downplaying of non-CO2 emissions.

Other forward-looking metrics, notably GWP, have been proposed.  GTP has also been proposed but, as explained in app 1, we consider the use of GTP inappropriate because it ignores all climate impacts and costs up to the year in which it applies, eg 100 years hence.

While GWP may not be ideal, it is the best there is at present.  It therefore makes sense to use it when assessing impacts and developing policy.  This principle extends to all area of scientific research and public policy.  In our real and imperfect world we have to use the best evidence and the best estimates that are available.  To argue that because our knowledge is imperfect, we should ignore an issue is absurd.  Such an argument is not applied in other areas of public life.  Uncertainly about future terrorist attacks or Ebola outbreaks is not used as a reason to ignore the issues.

The real reason for airbrushing non-CO2 emissions is not hard to find.  There is increasing pressure on and from politicians to expand airports and air travel.  The climate impacts of such a policy represent a highly ‘inconvenient truth’.  Given the widespread recognition of the role of CO2, government and its agencies could not hope to ignore CO2 impacts without attracting the severest criticism.  But for non-CO2 emissions, about which there is as yet very little public knowledge, government and its servants can hope to ignore the impacts while escaping criticism.

Global Warming Potential (GWP) is noted in the literature as a promising metric.  However a period need to be defined over which the effect are integrated.  We argue in app 7 that an average of GWP35 and GWP100 should be used.

Including cirrus, GWP35 and GWP100 are 3.69 and 1.9 respectively, giving an average of 2.8.  However, the uncertainty around cirrus is especially large.  This, leading to possibly misleading high impacts, makes a case for omitting cirrus from an index at present.

Excluding cirrus, GWP35 and GWP100 are 1.92 and 1.4 respectively, giving an average of 1.61, rounded to 1.6.  This is a very conservative figure – that is, it is likely to be lower than the true values.  (It is conservative because cirrus, although subject to great uncertainty, is nonetheless expected with a fair degree of confidence to add significant radiative forcing.  The calculations also assume a ‘low’ inpact of NOx.)

Where there are significant uncertainties, it seems appropriate to use conservative values.  This will avoid ‘overshoot’ whereby a high index is initially selected, leading to a particular set of policy responses, only for the index to be reduced in the light of further research, leading to possible differences or even reversals of policy responses.

Based on the foregoing, we propose an index of 1.6, based on GWP calculations.  That is, impacts of CO2 alone should be multiplied by 1.6 to allow for non-CO2 impacts.  This factor should be applied forthwith in order to inform the debate on the impacts of aviation and policy responses to it.

The data and calculations supporting this are indeed approximate, but there is very strong evidence that non-CO2 impacts are significant.  Furthermore, the factor of 1.6 is very conservative.  These are compelling reasons to allow for non-CO2 emissions and to apply this factor.  Simply citing ‘scientific uncertainty’ as a reason for ignoring non-CO2 emissions and not applying any factor is not tenable.

Recognising the ‘rough and ready’ nature of the calculations, the proposed index of 1.6 should be regarded very much as an interim figure.  A proper and fully independent study should be undertaken in order to refine this index or, indeed, to devise an alternative approach for addressing non-CO2 impacts.

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The report:

AirportWatch Briefing on Radiative Forcing June 2015

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