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Green's airport warnings
1st February 2009
The Greens have criticised the Government's
decision, opposed by all
Conservative and Liberal Democrat MPs, to build a third runway
at Heathrow
Airport. The Greens have also warned that Sheffield residents
are at risk if
Doncaster Council allow the owners of Doncaster Sheffield airport's
to relax
noise restrictions on night flights.
Cllr Bernard Little said;
"The argument that opponents of a third
runway are trying to stop poor people
having their cheap holidays in the sun is bogus. A report published
in
September by the World Development Movement and the New Economics
Foundation
has found that people on low incomes, who make up a third of the
UK population,
account for less than 8 per cent of passengers on low-cost flights
from the
UK. In fact, in 2007 the aviation industry cost UK taxpayers £10.4
billion
through tax exemptions.
"Aviation is already the fastest rising
source of CO2 emissions in the UK. The
government has adopted a target of 80% reduction of 1990 levels
of CO2
emissions by 2050, which expanding aviation will make impossible
to meet.
"Airplanes cause noise pollution too.
The owners of Doncaster Sheffield Airport
have submitted a Consultative Document to Doncaster Council with
the aim of
relaxing the noise rules for night flying for freight aircraft,
which could
easily be expanded to all users.
"This is why we are calling on the Council
to write to the Governemnt to ask
them not to build more runways at Heathrow or Stanstead, and also
to all Local
Authorities in South Yorkshire and to Yorkshire Forward urging
them to reject
any request to relax the rules on night flying into and out of
Doncaster
Sheffield Airport".
ENDS
Motion proposed by Bernard Little
This council
1. Notes that the decision by the government
to build a third runway at
Heathrow was opposed by all Conservative and Liberal Democrat
Members of
Parliament;
2. Notes that the report "Plane Truths:
Do the economic arguments for
aviation really fly?" published by the World Development
Movement and the
New Economics Foundation in September 2008 says that:
a) People on low incomes, who make up 32 per
cent of the UK population,
account for less than 8 per cent of passengers on low-cost flights
from the
UK;
b) The benefits of airline tourism to indigenous
communities are minimal
because for every £1 spent, 75p goes straight to multinational
hotel chains
and tour operators;
c) In 2007 the aviation industry cost UK taxpayers
£10.4 billion through tax
exemptions;
3. Notes that aviation is the fastest rising
source of CO2 emissions in the
UK;
4. Notes that the government has adopted a
target of 80% reduction of 1990
levels of CO2 emissions by 2050 and that expanding aviation will
make it
impossible to meet this target;
5. Further notes that owners of Doncaster
Sheffield Airport have submitted a
Consultative Document to Doncaster Council with the aim of relaxing
the noise
rules for night flying, and that although this relaxation is in
relation to
freight aircraft it could easily be expanded to all users;
6. Will therefore write to Secretary of State
for Transport and the
Secretary of State for the Environment asking them to reverse
the decision
to build a third runway at Heathrow and to halt plans for a second
runway at
Stanstead;
7. Will also write to all Local Authorities
in South Yorkshire and to
Yorkshire Forward urging them to reject any request to relax the
rules on
night flying into and out of Doncaster Sheffield Airport.
ENDS
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