The
dilemma the aviation industry is in was acutely captured at the CAPA Airlines in Transition Summit in Manchester earlier this month. On the one hand, all are
struggling to come out of the worst crisis ever, laden with massive debt and,
on the other, having to contend with environmental and consumer pressure as
well as concern over the war on Ukraine and its impact on, well, practically
everything – human costs, fuel costs, world order and stability.
So on the one hand, you
have airline executives on stage speaking about recovery and how well their
routes are performing as well as their sustainability targets – everyone has
set goals – and on the other, you have Cait Hewitt, policy director of
the Aviation Environment Federation, declaring
“the only solution is to fly less” and to “reduce long-haul flights.”
Hewitt says her organization
was fighting a couple of key campaigns – an aviation policy that aligns on net
zero and challenging airport expansion. “We seem to have an insatiable appetite
for growth and we should not be increasing airport capacity,” says Hewitt, who
acts as an expert witness in airport planning cases. “We are calling on ICAO
(International Civil Aviation Organization) to set a long-term plan.”
Joining her on the panel
on “Mega Trend 1: Decarbonization,” Piero Sierra, chief product officer at Skyscanner, calls
her the “bravest person to speak at an airline conference”, and spoke of the
recovery the online travel company was seeing. “Pre-pandemic, we had 100
million customers, we are back to 68 million. And they are mostly on mobile, at
74%.”
Subscribe to our newsletter below
Plus, they are making
greener choices, he says, with a majority “selecting our greener choices with a
price premium.” The challenge is to create normalized scores for aviation,
hotels and tours and activities so consumers understand what they are buying, so
everyone sees the same thing.”
IATA’s
director of fuel, Alexander Kuper, says fuel and SAF are now integrated into
IATA’s new environment sustainability division and the airline community is
committed to net zero by 2050. SAF (Sustainable Aviation Fuel) will be the main
tool, he says, and it is expected that by 2038, there will be more SAF in use
than normal fuel.
“To get aligned as a
global organization is a challenge but it can be done,” he says. “We need a
global approach. If you look at regions such as Saudi Arabia that is looking to
grow its air market (from 100 million to 330 million passengers by 2030), we
cannot deny these regions their chance of developing.”
Jonathan Counsell, group
head of sustainability at IAG, says aviation was the only
industry that had committed to net zero. “IAG made our commitment in October
2019, we have committed as an industry, now we must get ICAO commitment.”
And after the commitments,
he says, “Now it’s about delivery. The pace of technology in the past three to
five years has been nothing short of amazing and I’ve never been more
optimistic than now in my 15 years in aviation.”
A big focus is SAF, he says.
“We have 400,000 flights on SAF already and we can get to 10% by 2030 and
remember, the first 10% is the hardest. Once we get past that, we will be well
on our way and are looking at 60% by 2050.”
Christina Cassotis,
CEO of Pittsburgh International Airport, which is the
first airport in the world powered by solar energy – with close to 10,000 solar
panels – and natural gas generated right on site, says delivery starts at the
local level.
“We are the first airport
off the grid,” she says, adding it was investing in proprietary technology to
turn natural gas to blue hydrogen. “LNG should be considered as transition fuel
while we make the investments in SAF,” she says.
There’s also of course the
specter of government regulation and taxation, she notes.
Saying the industry has a
“massive messaging problem,” she says, “we all talk about what we are doing but
no one is talking to the consumer. Carbon calculators are like a diet counter,
it doesn’t mean anything to the consumer. We can get there by focusing on what’s
important to the people. We can ask, would you rather live in Pittsburgh today
or Pittsburgh in 1948?”
Fact is, she says, “You
take away air service, you take away the community,” adding, “if we don’t
earn the right to grow, we will not have the right to exist.”
* This article originally appeared on WiT.