Heathrow passengers turn blind eye to warming
By Gerard Wynn
LONDON (Reuters) - Public concern about climate change is growing in Britain but that will not stop a record Easter exodus from the world's busiest international airport.
Aviation contributes less to global warming than the likes of cars and farming but focuses minds on climate change because a single long-haul flight can double someone's annual greenhouse gas emissions.
A straw poll of 10 passengers flying from Heathrow on Thursday showed four were not convinced climate change was happening or caused by man, and all felt air transport was an inevitable part of modern life.
"We're teachers and say the right thing but maybe we don't do the right thing," said Chris Hykiel and his wife, off to Los Angeles for 11 days on a beach volleyball holiday.
"Yes, aviation can contribute to climate change but it's almost impossible to have an alternative," said Hykiel who would consider paying a "green tax" on top of ticket prices.
"It's just part of life now," said 40-year-old Khurram Mir, a doctor living in Glasgow off on a six-day trip to see family in Pakistan.
"You can't take a ship 6,000 miles to a business meeting. I'm a doctor, I can't take too much time off."
Companies like Climate Care allow people to fund emissions cuts elsewhere to offset their air travel -- for example by contributing to renewable energy projects -- and it calculates a return trip from London to Sydney produces 5.6 tonnes of carbon dioxide per person. Continued...




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