NEWS
RELEASE
(Brussels/
London/ San Francisco/ Washington – December 21, 2011) A transatlantic
coalition of environmental groups today applauded the decision of Europe’s
highest court to uphold the EU law to reduce carbon pollution from airplanes.
The decision, from the Court of Justice of the European Union, affirms that the
EU law is fully compliant with international law.
The
EU Aviation Directive, the world's only mandatory program to address emissions
from aviation, will take effect in January 2012. Today’s decision is the
suit’s final ruling in the Court of Justice, and the case will now return to
the UK High Court, where airlines
had originally brought the suit challenging UK regulations implementing the law
. The UK High Court will implement the recommendations of the Court of
Justice ruling.
“Today's decision,
from the highest court in the European Union, makes clear Europe’s innovative
law to reduce emissions from international flights is fully consistent with
international law, does not infringe on the sovereignty of other nations, and
is distinct from the charges and taxes subject to treaty limitations,” said the coalition.
The
Court’s decision makes clear that existing law bars precisely the
discriminatory treatment of airlines that the United States and others are
calling for, and that the US-EU Open Skies Agreement specifically provides for
this type of action when pursued for environmental purposes. The decision also
finds that the equivalent measures provision of the Aviation Directive
“corresponds precisely” to the objectives of ICAO Resolution A37-19 regarding
interaction of market-based measures.
The
coalition’s six participants include three U.S.-based groups (Center for
Biological Diversity, Earthjustice, and Environmental Defense Fund) and three
European groups (Aviation Environment Federation, Transport & Environment,
and WWF-UK). All six groups are intervenor-defendants in the litigation, and
were represented by Kate Harrison of Harrison Grant and Jon Turner and Laura
John of the Monckton Chambers.
BACKGROUND
Europe’s
Aviation Directive, which includes aviation emissions within the European
Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) from 1 January 2012, is a pioneering law that
holds airlines accountable for their emissions associated with their commercial
flights into or out of EU airports. Aviation is one of the
fastest-growing sources of greenhouse gas emissions, rising 3 to 4% per
year. Until now, the sector has escaped regulations that would require
emissions reductions.
Three
U.S. airlines — United/Continental and American — and their trade association,
Air Transport Association of America (now known as Airlines for America),
challenged the legality of the Europe's aviation emissions trading
system. In October, an Advocate General – a senior legal advisor appointed
by the Court of Justice of the European Union – issued a formal
recommendation to the Court supporting the legality of the EU law.
The 13-judge Grand Chamber has been deliberating the case since the Advocate
General’s opinion was released Oct. 6.
REACTIONS
FROM INTERVENORS
Tim Johnson, Director of the Aviation Environment
Federation said:
“The Court's finding
reinforces the EU's stance on finding a cost effective way of addressing the
aviation's significant and growing contribution to climate change. We hope that
the focus will now shift away from obstructing its progress on the eve of its
introduction and examine how such regional initiatives can form the building
blocks of a global agreement.”
Vera Pardee,
Senior Attorney at Center for Biological Diversity said:
“We
applaud this decision and the EU's resolve against international pressure
tactics. Until now, the airlines have sabotaged every effort to curb
their greenhouse gas emissions, including introducing bills in the U.S.
Congress that threaten to derail international aviation via global trade wars
simply to avoid the EU permitting system. The industry should end its
obstruction of common-sense.”
Martin Wagner,
Managing Attorney at Earthjustice said:
“This is an important
victory for the planet. US aircraft emissions account for nearly half of
worldwide carbon dioxide from aircraft; that amount is expected to triple by
mid-century. But the US airline industry has fought to avoid playing its
part in preventing runaway climate change. With US airlines shirking
their duty, Europe has had to take the lead. The airline industry should
now pressure the US government to level the playing field by imposing
equivalent restrictions on aircraft pollution in the United States.”
Annie Petsonk, International Counsel at
Environmental Defense Fund said:
“It
is high time airlines actually live up to their green claims, and comply with
the EU law, which will cut pollution and spark low-carbon innovation.
Americans invented the airplane, now it’s time for us to create
climate-friendly skies. The EU’s leadership challenges U.S. airlines to take
charge and deliver to the flying public clean and green air travel.”
Bill Hemmings,
Programme Manager of Transport & Environment said:
“With
the EU-ETS cleared for take-off, the aviation industry has just ten
days left to draw up a new flight plan. The news for airlines?
The European Court has written your New Years Resolution for
you: 'We agree to join other responsible industries and start polluting
less'.”
"In this season of goodwill to all men, we hope the airline industry will
stop sending their lawyers to ruin everyone's Christmas and start taking
climate change seriously."
Keith Allott,
Head of Climate Change at WWF-UK said:
"Today's
verdict is a victory for European law and environmental leadership. The
Scrooges who have claimed that it is illegal to include international airlines
in the ETS have been proved wrong. We hope that aviation industry
lobbyists will now divert their energies into securing an ambitious global
agreement to tackle the sector's soaring emissions rather than trying to tear
down the ETS, one of the few building blocks we have. The EU can now press
ahead with implementing the scheme, and European governments must deliver on
the aim that ETS revenues should be ring-fenced for action on climate change in
developing countries. That would be a real win-win and the best Christmas
present of all."
CONTACT
Tim
Johnson, Aviation Environment Federation (UK)
+44
(0) 7710 381742, tim@aef.org.uk
Vera
Pardee, Center for Biological Diversity (USA)
+1-858-717-1448,
vpardee@biologicaldiversity.org
Martin
Wagner, Earthjustice (USA)
+1-415-217-2000,
mwagner@earthjustice.org
Jennifer
Andreassen, Environmental Defense Fund (USA)
+1-202-288-4867,
jandreassen@edf.org
Bill
Hemmings, Transport & Environment (BE)
+32
(0) 487 582706, bill.hemmings@transportenvironment.org
George
Smeeton, WWF-UK (UK)
+44
(0)1483 412 388, Mob: +44 (0)7917 052 948, GSmeeton@wwf.org.uk
###
About
Aviation Environment Federation
AEF
is the UK's only environmental organisation dedicated solely to addressing the
aviation sector's environmental impacts. Established in 1975, AEF's members
include the communities living around the UK's airports and environmental
organisations. www.aef.org.uk
About
the Center for Biological Diversity
The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation
organization with more than 320,000 members and online activists dedicated to
the protection of endangered species and wild places. www.biologicaldiversity.org
About
Earthjustice
Earthjustice
is a non-profit public interest law firm dedicated to protecting the
magnificent places, natural resources, and wildlife of this earth, and to
defending the right of all people to a healthy environment.
About
Environmental Defense Fund
Environmental
Defense Fund (edf.org), a leading national
nonprofit organization, creates transformational solutions to the most serious
environmental problems. EDF links science, economics, law and innovative
private-sector partnerships. See twitter.com/EnvDefenseFund;
facebook.com/EnvDefenseFund;
edf.org/ClimateTalks
About
Transport & Environment
Established
in 1990, Transport & Environment (T&E) has grown to become the
principal environmental organisation campaigning on sustainable transport at
the EU level in Brussels.
Our
primary focus is on European transport and environmental policy but our work in
Brussels is supported by around 50 member organisations working to promote an
environmentally sound approach to transport across Europe.
About
WWF-UK
WWF
is one of the world's largest independent conservation organisations, with more
than five million supporters and a global network active in more than one
hundred countries. We're working to create solutions to the most serious
environmental issues facing our planet, so that people and nature can
thrive. Through our engagement with the public, businesses and
government, we focus on safeguarding the natural world, tacking climate change
and changing the way we live.
In
2011, WWF's 50th anniversary year, we are celebrating what we have achieved so
far together, and are positive about tackling the challenges of the future.
Find out more about our work, past and present at www.wwf.org.uk