Aviation Featured Transport

Airlines stall in tackling climate change – investor group

By Aliyu DANLADI

Airlines are doing too little in the fight against global warming, a study funded by investors with $13 trillion of assets under management said on Tuesday.

Faith Ward, Co-Chair of the Transition Pathway Initiative (TPI), on behalf of the British Environment Agency Pension Fund, said in Oslo.

The sector accounts for two per cent of world greenhouse gas emissions and should do more to manage risks of climate change, the TPI said in a review of 20 of the world’s biggest listed airlines.

It rated Delta, Lufthansa, United Airlines and ANA Holdings as the best performers at managing the business risks and opportunities of climate change.

But all could do more.

“Investors have a clear message to the aviation sector: When it comes to carbon performance they must be in it for the long haul,’’ Ward said.

“Investors do care … it’s about encouraging disclosure so we can make informed decisions,’’ she added.

TPI, which seeks to assess the performance of businesses in cutting carbon, groups 40 investors with $13 trillion under management, including BNP Paribas and Legal & General Investment Management.

Its research is by the London School of Economics’ Grantham Research Institute.

More fuel-efficient planes, wider use of biofuels and ensuring that planes fly at full capacity would help to limit emissions.

TPI separately said easyJet and Alaska Air now had the most efficient fleets among the top 20 listed airlines, judged by their emissions per passenger kilometre flown.

At the other end of that scale, ANA, Japan Airlines, Korean Air and Singapore Airlines have the highest emissions intensities, it said.

Lead author, Prof. Simon Dietz of the Grantham Research Institute, said some airlines had adopted broad industry goals to cap net carbon emissions at 2020 levels, or to halve net emissions by 2050 from 2005 levels.

But that focus on net emissions often meant airlines could buy permits to emit carbon dioxide, rather than make cuts themselves.

“The issue is that we don’t know how much they are going to reduce their own flight emissions compared to buying offsets,’’ he said.

Dietz also said there were other effects of aviation apart from carbon dioxide that needs more research.

Contrails, for instance, may be able to cause high-level clouds that trap heat.

Under the 2015 Paris climate agreement, almost 200 governments agreed to cut emissions to help avert more floods, droughts and rising sea levels.

They promised to “enhance public and private sector participation’’ in cutting emissions.—–Reuters

 

Related posts

TCN in-house engineers take over substations construction, transformers repairs, installation from contractors

Editor

Civil servant paid self N145m PIB media fund – Senate

Our Reporter

Bi-Courtney condemns union’s disruption of MMA2 operations

Yunus Yusuf

Capital importation decreases to $2.85 billion in Q3 –NBS

Editor

Seplat Drives Growth in Domestic Gas Market

Our Reporter

Oando hosts 6th edition of its webinar series

Our Reporter