NEWS RELEASE -- March 28, 2012
Joint statement by Aviation
Environment Federation, Center for Biological Diversity, Earthjustice,
Environmental Defense Fund, Transport & Environment, WWF-UK
(Brussels/ London/ San Francisco/
Washington – March 28, 2012) United, American Airlines, and their trade
association, Airlines for America, gave up on a lost cause, a late and
ill-conceived legal challenge to the European Union’s landmark law limiting
global warming pollution from aviation.
While the airlines gave no explanation
for abruptly dropping the case in the UK High Court in London, it’s likely
their attorneys realized their efforts would be fruitless given the strength of
the December 21 ruling from the European Court of Justice upholding the EU
directive as consistent with international law.
After pursuing the case for more
than two years and losing in the European court, the airlines filed papers
asking permission to add new claims just before the case was scheduled to
close. The High Court had planned to hear that request on Thursday, but
yesterday the airlines withdrew this request. Although we are pleased this
avoids a pointless legal challenge in the UK, it is disappointing that U.S
airlines are refusing to accept the ECJ ruling, and may simply be moving the
battlefield elsewhere.
Airlines, governments and
non-governmental organizations agree that nations should reduce climate
pollution from aviation through the International Civil Aviation Organization
(ICAO). Europe has reiterated that a successful adoption of robust
pollution reduction measures to address global aviation emissions at ICAO would
enable the EU to amend its law.
Rather than continue to fight the
EU, the airlines should use the opportunity to support a global deal for
aviation, especially given the unexpected momentum created by ICAO Secretary
General Raymond Benjamin’s proposal to agree, by the end of the year, on global
measures to reduce aviation emissions.
Ironically, some in the aviation industry
now appear to be trying to pressure the Obama Administration to bring a
challenge under ICAO’s Article 84 procedure based on the same losing arguments
the airlines intended to use in the London court. These industry
representatives are also pressing the U.S. Congress to prohibit U.S. carriers
from participating in the EU law.
The ICAO Secretary General has
already signaled that an Article 84 challenge would slow the organization’s
momentum toward a new agreement.
The better step is for the United
States, Europe, and other countries to work together with airlines and civil
society to craft a global solution and enforceable domestic measures.
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 emissions associated with their commercial flights that land at or take off
from 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 (ATA), challenged the legality of the aviation emissions
trading system, as applied to non-EU airlines. On December 21, 2011, the
European Court of Justice upheld the Aviation Directive, making clear that the
pioneering law to reduce emissions 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.
A transatlantic coalition of six
environmental groups are intervenor-defendants in the litigation. The
coalition includes 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).
###
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
Sarah Burt, Earthjustice (USA)
+1-510-599-8573, sburt@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. www.earthjustice.org
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. www.wwf.org.uk