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Minister warns that flight decarbonisation is ‘existential issue’ for holiday companies

Baroness Vere says the UK is one of the ‘world leaders’ in sustainable aviation

Travel Desk
Thursday 15 June 2023 14:26 BST
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Airlines are looking to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2050
Airlines are looking to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2050 (Getty Images)

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Decarbonising air travel is an “existential issue” for the holiday companies, a minister has warned.

Aviation minister Baroness Vere told an industry summit that some travel providers could become unviable if customers are not offered low-carbon ways of reaching far-flung destinations.

Speaking at Abta’s Travel Matters event in Westminster, she described decarbonisation as “the elephant in the room”.

She said: “I do think it could be an existential issue, particularly for some companies that may not have massive margins. If you lose 10–20 per cent of your market because people actually decide to travel either not at all or in a completely different way than your organisation can cover, that’s you done.

“I really do think that we all need to work together on this decarbonisation issue.”

Baroness Vere said the UK is “one of the world leaders” in making aviation more sustainable.

She claimed the requirement for airlines operating in the UK to ensure flights are powered by at least 10 per cent sustainable aviation fuel (Saf) by 2030 will “really start pushing the fuel through the system and encourage investment”.

Saf is produced from sustainable sources such as agricultural waste and used cooking oil. It reduces carbon emissions by up to 80 per cent compared with traditional jet fuel, but is currently several times more expensive to produce.

Saf is seen as vital to the airline sector achieving its target of reaching net zero carbon emissions by 2050.

Abta chief executive Mark Tanzer told the summit that the UK must “step up the pace of investment” in decarbonising air travel and “put ourselves on a crisis footing”.

He said: “The target of net zero aviation is an aggressive but necessary one. Much work remains to be done, but progress is being made.”

The conference also heard that new figures show Brexit has resulted in a sharp drop in the number of UK workers in holiday jobs in the EU.

Additional reporting by PA.

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