Campaigners against the
expansion of Britain's airports are flying high. As we report today, Manchester
Airport's proposal to build a new car park on the Cheshire Green Belt has been
killed off. This follows Luton Airport's announcement last week that it is
abandoning its own ambitious expansion plan. Luton's Spanish owners, Abertis,
cited cost as the reason. But it is also likely have had something to do with
the high levels of local resistance. These twin victories will give heart to
those thousands battling against the expansion of other British airports.
The rest of us should be
heartened, too. These campaigns are led by local communities, protesting mainly
about the impact of expansion on the immediate environment in terms of noise
and air pollution. But they are far from parochial affairs. Through their
lobbying, these groups are helping to preserve more than just the tranquillity
of their own small corner of the world. They are helping to maintain the
stability of the global climate.
According to the Tyndall
Centre for Climate Change Research, if our aviation sector continues to grow at
the present rate, its carbon emissions alone will exceed Britain's entire
current output of greenhouse gases by 2050. More efficient aircraft will help
reduce emissions, but by nowhere near enough to keep them within safe levels.
The inescapable fact is that the growth of the sector needs to be curbed if
Britain is to play its full part in the battle against climate change.
The airline industry
argues that larger airports are good for our economic growth. Although such
benefits are usually exaggerated, there is some truth in this. But those
economic benefits will be dwarfed by the damage that will be inflicted by
climate change in the long term. The respected economist Sir Nicholas Stern
spelt out those costs in his report on the economic effect of global warming
for the Treasury last year. Any serious strategic analysis of the UK's economic
interests will conclude, in the light of Stern, that a massive expansion of the
aviation sector is undesirable.
Despite this abundance of
evidence, the Government is mired in a fearful muddle when it comes to
aviation. A White Paper in 2003 on the future of air transport concluded that
an expansion of British airports was economically necessary. This was
reinforced by a Treasury report last year by the former head of British
Airways, Sir Rod Eddington, which recommended the extension of Heathrow Airport
to ease flight congestion in the South-east. In addition, another recent White
Paper proposed to centralise the planning process. The result will be the
overriding of local concerns over airport expansion plans. Indeed, the former
Communities Secretary, Ruth Kelly, specifically cited the delays to Heathrow's
Terminal 5 as a justification for this legislation.
If the Government is
serious about mitigating climate change, it must impose controls on the
aviation industry. Bringing aviation into the European Union carbon-trading
framework, as the Government proposes, would be welcome. But it would not be
sufficient on its own. We need an EU-wide levy on airline fuel to remove a
substantial hidden subsidy enjoyed by the airlines. The price of flying needs
to reflect much more closely the cost it inflicts on the global environment.
The Government's strategy
need not rely solely on new taxes. The goal of reducing the demand for flying
can also be brought nearer by promoting lower-carbon transport solutions, such
as the train network. But it is clear that this dangerously ambivalent approach
cannot continue. The Government must accept that indulging the aviation
industry is incompatible with the necessary action needed to protect the
environment.