The New York Times / November 18, 2009

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/18/science/earth/18offset.html

Paying More for Flights Eases Guilt, Not Emissions
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL

In 2002 Responsible Travel became one of the first travel companies to
offer customers the option of buying so-called carbon offsets to
counter the planet-warming emissions generated by their airline
flights.

But last month Responsible Travel canceled the program, saying that
while it might help travelers feel virtuous, it was not helping to
reduce global emissions. In fact, company officials said, it might
even encourage some people to travel or consume more.

“The carbon offset has become this magic pill, a kind of
get-out-of-jail-free card,” Justin Francis, the managing director of
Responsible Travel, one of the world’s largest green travel companies
to embrace environmental sustainability, said in an interview. “It’s
seductive to the consumer who says, ‘It’s $4 and I’m carbon-neutral,
so I can fly all I want.’ ”

Offsets, he argues, are distracting people from making more
significant behavioral changes, like flying less.

In theory, the purchase of carbon offsets is supposed to cancel out
the emissions generated by activities like flying or heating office
buildings by directing money to programs that reduce emissions
elsewhere, like tree-planting in Africa or a hydropower project in
Brazil. An airline passenger might volunteer to pay $5 to $40 to
offset his flight, with the price linked to distance.

Offsets have played a growing role in the greening of travel because
carbon dioxide emissions from airplanes are growing so quickly and
there is currently no technological fix that would drastically lower
them.

In the United States, dozens of hotels and airlines have embraced such
programs in the last year or two. United Airlines became the latest
American airline to offer one this summer. Globally, offset programs
have grown into a multimillion-dollar industry.

But it has proved difficult to monitor or quantify the
emissions-reducing potential of the thousands of green projects
financed by customers’ payments, and there are no industrywide
standards.

Responsible Travel is not the only organization that has changed its
mind about the usefulness of offsets: Yahoo and the United States
House of Representatives both ended trial offset-purchase programs
this year, concluding that the money was better spent on improving
their buildings’ energy efficiency.

Some of the world’s leading experts on the emissions issue have
reviewed and rejected purchasing offsets for air travel.

“We’re always looking at it, but so far I’ve decided not to do it,”
said Paul Dickinson, chief executive of the Carbon Disclosure Project,
a vast nonprofit consortium of companies that have pledged to report
and reduce their emissions. For one thing, he said, offsetting the
emissions of a flight from London to New York would probably require
an extra fee of $200 to $300, far above what any airline is now
charging.

And some experts say that emissions from airline travel are simply so
large that it may be impossible to offset them.

“Buying offsets is a nice idea, just like giving money to a soup
kitchen is a nice idea, but that doesn’t end world hunger,” said Anja
Kollmuss, a staff scientist for the Stockholm Environment Institute
who is based at a branch at Tufts University.

“Buying offsets won’t solve the problem because flying around the way
we do is simply unsustainable,” said Ms. Kollmuss, who has researched
airline offsets.

A recent study in Britain concluded that one flight from London to Los
Angeles produced more carbon dioxide per person than the average
British commuter produces in a year by traveling by train, subway or
car.

Airlines defend offsets, even while acknowledging that some projects
have not lived up to their promises. For example, mango trees that
were planted in India to offset a concert tour by the band Coldplay
were found to have died a few years later.

EasyJet, one of Europe’s largest low-cost airlines, did not offer
offsets until 2007 — late for a European carrier — because it was
trying to figure out how to ensure the money went to the right places,
said Oliver Aust, a spokesman.

It now gives passengers the option of offsetting their flight
emissions by investing directly in projects that have been approved by
a United Nations certification program for reducing emissions.

EasyJet, which was founded in 1995 but has vastly expanded its fleet
since 2003, also uses only the newest and most fuel-efficient jets,
flies full planes and packs in extra rows of seats, making its
estimated emissions per passenger 28 percent lower than more
established carriers on the same routes. Some airlines are
experimenting with innovations that may someday reduce emissions, like
using fuels made with algae rather than crude oil.

Passenger offsets purport to cancel out carbon dioxide emissions ton
for ton through investments in green projects. But critics say there
is no transparency about how companies measure whether that happens.

For example, many airlines offer investments in tree-planting projects
because trees absorb carbon dioxide. But experts say it takes decades
for trees to start fully absorbing the gas, making them a questionable
offset for airplanes, which emit carbon dioxide. Ms. Kollmuss said the
quality of offsets depended on the project. “But if it’s very cheap,
it does raise red flags,” she said.

For Mr. Francis of Responsible Travel, the final straw came when he
noticed that carbon offsets were being offered by private jet
companies and helicopter tour operators, which generate very high
emissions per passenger. “The message was, ‘Don’t worry, you can
offset the emissions,’ ” he said. “But you don’t really need to see
Sydney from the air, do you? And you can travel in a commercial
airliner.”

Mr. Francis said he was not advocating an end to flying — Responsible
Travel offers tours to Jordan, the Galapagos Islands and China, among
other far-flung destinations — but simply more reflection on the
environmental impact of such journeys.

Responsible Travel had bought its offsets through one of the
best-known offset companies, ClimateCare, which was purchased last
year by JP Morgan.

While acknowledging that improved, universal standards for personal
airline offsets are needed, Richard Folland, a climate change and
energy adviser to JP Morgan, said the offset concept had played an
important role in helping to direct money to otherwise unaffordable
environmental projects in poorer countries.

“The primary goal is to reduce emissions, but offsets are helpful” in
managing the costs, he said, adding, “There has to be a balance
struck.”

Mr. Dickinson of the nonprofit Carbon Disclosure Project said that
rather than buying offsets he had sharply scaled back on flying and
was instead taking trains or conducting meetings by phone or
teleconference. He said that if he owned an airline, he would now be
diversifying into other modes of transport.

Referring to the recent purchase of a railroad by the investor Warren
Buffett, he said, “What does it tell you that the world’s most
successful investor is investing in trains?”

Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company
-- 
Jim Devine
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to