UK budgets domestic flights move blasted for ignoring climate emergency and sending wrong message ahead of COP26
Chancellor Rishi Sunak has drawn flak online for ignoring âclimate emergencyâ fears after cutting taxes on domestic air travel and âundermining [the UKâs] credibilityâ as it prepares to host the COP26 climate summit.
Delivering his budget on Wednesday â" only days before the UN climate conference gets underway in Glasgow â" Sunak reasoned that making internal air travel cheaper by lowering the Air Passenger Duty (APD) would âcut the cost of living,â âboost regional airportsâ and âbring people togetherâ from across the country.
âRight now, people pay more for return flights within and between the four nations of the UK than they do when flying home from abroad,â he said, adding that the lowered rates on flights between airports in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland will come into effect from April 2023.
The chancellor claimed the policy would benefit some ânine million passengersâ who would â[see] their duty cut by halfâ as well as provide a fillip to airports like Aberdeen, Inverness and Southampton, which he described as âmajor regional employers.â
Also on rt.com Queen Elizabeth will not attend COP26 summit reception after medical advice to rest â" Buckingham PalaceThe announcement came a day after the governmentâs Climate Change Committee (CCC) issued an assessment of its âNet Zeroâ strategy to curb carbon emissions by 2050. In the report, the advisory body had recommended bringing in policies to discourage âaviation demandâ and warned the government that its strategy had ânothing to sayâ on aviation.
Noting that âmost [carbon] emissions come from international rather than domestic aviation,â however, Sunak said he would create a new âultra long haul bandâ of air passenger duty â" affecting âless than 5%â of passengers â" that would raise the cost of flights travelling over 5,500 miles, from April 2023.
Many social media users criticised the APD policy as flying âin the face of climate emergencyâ warnings, with a number of people noting that the move would â[worsen] air quality in the UK and beyondâ since more passengers will âopt to fly.â
Environmental group Communities Against Gatwick Noise and Emissions (Cagne) was among those who called on Sunak to â[invest] in trainsâ instead.
In a series of tweets slamming the budget as an âutter failure,â Green MP Caroline Lucas said that the chancellor did not âget the memo on the climate emergencyâ and was âpouring fuel on [the] fires of ecological breakdownâ while taking the UK âfurther awayâ from a greener economy.
Several people, including Labour MP and former Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell, questioned what kind of âmessageâ Sunak was trying to convey ahead of the COP26 conference, which will see some 120 world leaders in attendance.
âSo much for tackling climate change and fairness. Cutting air passenger duty on domestic flights undermines credibility before Cop26,â McDonnell tweeted, also pointing out that Sunak was âcutting the levy on the bankers who caused the economic crash in 2008â.
Sunak cuts air ticket tax for internal flights. So it's probably going to be cheaper to fly between the 4 nations than catching a train. Leading the Green way ahead of #Cop26 big time. ð¤ #budget2022
â" SorLuca ðªðº ð (@AlarmBell) October 27, 2021Sunak announces a reduction in airport taxes on domestic flights in the UK - just as we need to cut airline carbon emissions. What a message to send out before #cop26#budget2021
â" Richard Murphy (@RichardJMurphy) October 27, 2021However, some commenters defended the move as prioritising the âdomestic tourism marketâ over international travel. Others still opined that it would âforceâ train companies to lower their âtoo highâ fares. A few people also claimed that domestic flights were a relatively smaller emitter than both rail journeys and international air travel.
Also on rt.com Official mascot of COP26 âBonnie the Sealâ decried as âgiant ratâ dressed in pricey taxpayer-funded outfitThink your friends would be interested? Share this story!
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