This is the peak holiday season, but a few minutes on the internet and a few pounds to discuss a flight to Glasgow, Manchester, Dublin. . . and Prague, Rome or Barcelona.
Not for much longer, but as an influential member of the group get their way. Appalled by what they see as a willful disregard of the consequences of the government’s cheap air travel on global warming, the cross-party Environmental Audit Committee tomorrow is a series of suggestions for people to pay for any damage they do.
It may take some time, and given the patchwork of international agreements that apply to flights in foreign countries, it is far more likely to put an end to discounted mean that Manchester rates than to Moscow (£ 118 this week, if you know where to look). But the goal is to convert at least some of the aircraft passengers to high-speed train link. Members also changes to the roads in Britain, with the increase in road tax, road tolls and other costs specific to the overload.
It is very important, a committee member told The Observer yesterday that the government should factor in the environmental impact of its transport policy – something that members were surprised to find, is not the case. There is an ambitious overall target to reduce carbon dioxide emissions in Britain by 60 percent by 2050, but no concrete plan for transportation – which is the biggest emissions culprit and shows every sign of worse.
”They even measure the relative impact of the emissions building new roads to the new public transport project,” the MP said.
While the national road-charging scheme to charge motorists from miles tested, aimed at reducing traffic jams, not to discriminate between the higher-emissions Land Rover and less environmentally damaging Toyota Prius.
But tomorrow’s report is expected to say that the biggest problem is air travel. Travel to the Mediterranean, the budget airline, may now be worth less than a tankful of petrol for the 4×4. Members will argue that the problem arises because the airlines do not pay tax on fuel, as a personal obligation charges were kept unrealistically low, and because nobody in the government is willing to take on airlines.
Transport Secretary, Douglas Alexander, told the committee that the government solve the problem of air emissions by pushing for air transportation is included in the Europe-wide emissions trading system. But with many airlines to support this strategy, members were skeptical. Their fear was that the “soft option” would significantly change domestic policy on air travel, despite official data showing that transport – particularly air travel – only the UK economy’s emissions have risen since 1990.
”Given the forecast growth in aviation emissions could take traffic from our worldwide emissions goal, leaving no room for emissions from other sectors of the economy in 2050,” said Desmond Turner, MP for Brighton Kemptown Labour during the committee hearing Alexandra.
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August 20th, 2010 No Comments
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