Transcript

Reach for the Sky

Female speaker 1

Now the world is in your hands with TV Travel Shop as we can you fly from airports all over the UK to destinations far and wide...

Narrator

Each year more of us are choosing cheap flights to travel on our holiday trips than ever before, but is aviation fuel responsible for creating the very weather we are trying to escape from?During this programme we will explore how the aviation industry has gone from pioneer to polluter in their quest to reach for the sky.

Ted Solomon

The Lysander was the plane that used to tow the drogue for target practice, they would go out over the sea and you continued to hear 'pop pop pop pop pop' like this and on one or two occasions the drogue was so badly shot at it would drop in the fields.

Narrator

Ted Solomon has lived here on the Gower Peninsular of South Wales his entire life. His passion for aircraft is equally matched by an intense love for his farm. Strewn across his farm lie the crumbling remains of a World War II airbase. To prepare for the Battle of Britain in 1940, the Air Ministry took control of his fields to train fighter pilots.

Ted Solomon

We had the airmen’s mess, the sergeant’s mess, from which I am speaking now and the officer’s mess, all put on our fields.

Narrator

For many generations his own and many other families had relied on their common rights to feed their animals on nearby Fairwood Common, but over the course of the war much of the rich and fertile soil disappeared under concrete runways, access roads and buildings.

Ted Solomon

We were looking forward to that huge central area of Fairwood to be given back and all the installations demolished, taken away.

Narrator

Despite written assurances that Ted’s farm would be returned intact, the Air Ministry instead abandoned the airbase leaving the buildings and runways to slowly decline.Eleven years after the end of the war, the Gower Peninsular was officially recognised as Britain’s first area of outstanding natural beauty, in that same year Parliament extinguished the grazing rights of all Fairwood commoners. As compensation, Ted was offered only fifty one pounds, five shillings and eleven pence. In return Ted would have to agree to waive away any possibility of future claims.The young farmer refused to sign.

Ted Solomon

So that’s how it stands today, they have taken the land and they have refused to pay us the price for it. The commoners being farmers, busy people, nobody has the time really to put into it to bring it to a head.

Narrator

Many other airfields have a similar history to Fairwood Common which prompted a coalition of farmers and environmentalists to launch a land rights campaign for Britain in 1995.

Male

Hopefully we will be able to drive the coaches right on to the airfields. So far there are no police around that we have heard of here, although there are some at Fleet.

Narrator

Many of the farmers surrounding Wisely airbase in Surrey had their common rights suspended when the Air Ministry took control of the land in 1943 and just as on Fairwood Common, grazing rights were never reinstated when the base was eventually abandoned.

George Monbiot

We have taken over the sight of Wisely airfield, it is now a disused airfield, it is wasted destroyed land.They are thinking of turning it back into an airfield at 35,000 flights a year here, we have taken it back for the people of Britain as land which is once more ours in the common domain.

Narrator

For seven days the campaigners built shelters, planted crops and trees while living on the airfield, their high profile occupation would later inspire dozens of similar land rights demonstrations across Britain.

Josh Terre

It is a worldwide issue, people are being – had their land and their rights to the land stolen from them and land rights is one of the worldwide environmental and social justice issues of the next century and it is important to have that fight here as well as other places. Just because the land got stolen a long time ago, doesn’t make the issue any less relevant here.

Narrator

Plans to reintroduce flights at Wisely airfield have since been abandoned. Meanwhile back on Fairwood Common this World War II airfield was put back into use, mainly for private flying lessons. Until 2002 when a high flying accountant stepped into the picture. Millionaire Roy Thomas purchased the lease of Fairwood airfield for an undisclosed sum adding it to his extensive list of properties in the nearby city of Swansea.

Aircraft

...Hotel route via the Mumbles to...

Narrator

Mr Thomas is also Chairman of his own airline company Air Wales which began using the airfield for commuting between London and Swansea. Mr Thomas hopes to expand the small airfield situated in the middle of a prime beauty spot into a fully commercial airport. By lowering journey times, Air Wales is challenging the other existing methods of transport in the race to London. However, as road traffic around the airport increases local residents are concerned about the impact a larger airport will have on their lives.

Radio presenter

Morning ... you are through to the hotline.

Radio voice (male #1)

I think instead of protesting against the airport, these people should be behind this man who is putting his own money into the airport.

Radio voice (female #1)

People around the airports are in danger of having £20,000 knocked off the value of their homes – if that is the bottom line for you and you don’t care about the environment, maybe you will wake up now.

Radio voice (male #2)

We have got to realise that we have to stop global warming and it is not nimbyish to do that.

Radio voice (female #2)

But I think we have to weigh up the advantages because any city without an airport is a second-class city.

Narrator

Tourism is the region's largest revenue earner and some business people fear that noise could damage its reputation as a first-class relaxation spot.

Marianne Walters

The people that come to Gower are mainly couples and families with young children and they come for the beaches, they come for walks and my guest book is full of remarks about how relaxing Gower is, how glorious the beaches are.People say well there won’t be big aeroplanes coming in, there doesn’t have to be big aeroplanes, the fifty seaters that are coming in now are very very noisy, propeller planes.

Narrator

Aircraft noise is only one concern. In the summer of 2003 Swansea City Councillors were summoned to the airfield to inspect the proposed site of a new aircraft hanger.Similar in size to 144 bedroom houses, nature lovers are concerned that the huge construction work could affect the surrounding award-winning countryside.

Roy Jones

We have been concerned about the airport for many years because it is completely surrounded by a SAC – that is a special area of conservation; it contains the marsh fritillary butterfly which is quite a rare species in Europe generally.They have considered it as an area of outstanding natural beauty, but that is not an ecological designation, that is a landscape designation and they haven’t looked at ecology at all.

Narrator

At the Guild Hall the councillors find public demonstrations as they arrive to make their decision about the construction of the enormous hanger.

Darlene McCullough

Any other development of this size would go through rigorous control, there would be environmental studies done, there would be impact on the local economy and the local environment, but this is not happening in this case and we feel it is a case where the council are actually in favour of something because a local businessman is supporting it.

Roy Jones

On three days before the planning committee when the papers became available, we had a meeting with one of the chief planners. I asked about the ecology of the site and he said that an ecological report had been prepared by one of the ecological people in his department, Judy Sharrock.So we asked the receptionist to contact Judy Sharrock to find out where the report was and the message came back that the report had been lost.

Narrator

Swansea Council later admitted that the report had only ever consisted of a hastily written email from their ecologist, the unsigned note was inserted into the file before being presented to the planning committee. Inside the council chambers only one counsellor spoke out against the airport and the plans for the hanger were passed.Controversial plans to erect barbed wire fences surrounding the common were also given the green light. Friends of the Earth continued to request a full report on how the airport expansion would affect the surrounding ecology.

Roy Jones

Eventually we had a reply and this must have been three months after the planning meeting and the report said there was no ecological report.

Interviewer

Do you feel that you have been lied to?

Roy Jones

Oh well we have been deceived we feel, we have been deceived.

Narrator

David Gill, Head of Swansea Planning for Major Projects, declined to be interviewed and supplied this statement instead:'It is adopted council planning policy to support the retention and development of the airport subject to there being no unacceptable adverse environmental impact.'

Interviewer

Is there a fundamental problem with the airport being – that it's in the wrong place?

Martin Caton

Clearly if you were establishing an airport to service South West Wales now you wouldn’t build it at Fairwood on Gower, it would be closer to the M4.Having said that there clearly is that infrastructure there, it would cost an awful lot now to close it down because compensation would have to be paid by presumably the local authority if it chose to go down that road, and it does not because it strongly supports the role of Swansea airport as a regional airport.

Narrator

Political support for the industry is so strong that in 2003 the Government launched their thirty year aviation plan, also known as the White Paper. The document supports the expansion of nearly every main British airport.However, to gain permission to expand at Heathrow, the airline industry has to first lower the levels of toxic air already hanging over its neighbours.If the pollution can somehow be lowered, 700 homes surrounding Britain’s busiest airport will be demolished to make way for a third runway. The expansion plans also called for the closure and demolition of three schools and will forcibly evict thousands of people.

John Stewart

From every point of view the Government’s White Paper is a poor document, it is as relied on as entirely for its claims about economics of work done by the aviation industry, it hasn’t seriously tackled global warming, it has dismissed noise, it hasn’t really considered air pollution and my prediction would be that long before the thirty years is out, the aviation White Paper will be seen as a redundant document.

Narrator

John Stewart’s organisation has been set up to inform and represent the views of communities opposing the expansion plans at Heathrow.Whilst Clearskies concentrate on legal challenges, other groups are turning to a more direct form of action.After completing the thirty metre climb, five activists began a week-long occupation of a Heathrow crane to highlight how airline corporations are being heavily subsidised by the Government.Each year aviation companies avoid paying nine billion pounds in taxes. The directors are not required to pay VAT when purchasing their aircraft, while most of the vast quantities of fuel they consume remains entirely free of tax.

John Stewart

If that was imposed and if aviation fuel was taxed the same way as petrol for cars, the demand would be damped down to such an extent there would be no need for any more runways even in the South East over the next thirty years.The government is artificially stimulating demand through these tax concessions.

Narrator

To curb the predicted growth in air traffic, many have pointed towards rail and particularly high speed trains as a more sustainable solution for our travel needs.

John Stewart

45% of the journeys people make in the Euro-controlled countries, that’s the wider Europe, are 500 km or less in length, that is about 3 hours on a train.There is enormous scope to switch from short haul flights to high speed rail, the sadness is the government hasn’t really investigated alternatives to this growth seriously in any way at all.

Narrator

Ever since the first aircraft touched down on South Wales soil back in 1912, authorities have been swayed by the glamorous appeal of aviation. Perhaps enjoying the prestige of being a city-hopping official during the 1960s or busy launching airliners in the 80s, politicians somehow overlooked the need to place expansion restrictions on airports.Concerns have been raised about the role of Swansea Council in funding a commercial airport situated in the middle of a designated area of outstanding natural beauty, particularly since the region is already well served by Cardiff International Airport just forty minutes a way.As construction begins at the Fairwood Common airfield not everyone is pleased by Swansea Council support for pouring over £800,000 of public funds into the private company.

Marianne Walters

As somebody that’s needed to use our own capital and our own assets to start up a business, I resent public money being used for what is basically a commercial enterprise and a profit-making enterprise.

Narrator

As air traffic at Swansea Airport grows, the danger of accidents may also increase. Here a helicopter trying to land has crashed just in front of the control tower.

Male

Do you know if anybody is hurt?

Female airport employee

I don’t know, that is why we are staying, we don’t know what has happened.

Narrator

Fortunately, no one was injured in this collision and emergency services were on the scene within minutes.

Radio voice

The airport is blocked by an incident, it is completely blocked.

Male eyewitness

Well we were just standing, we heard the clatter and when I looked over the building all I could see was the rotor blades and debris flying up.

Narrator

As the fire service left, ground staff found that a number of other aircraft had also suffered considerable damage by flying debris.While the reporters are picking up the story and airport staff are picking up the pieces, one of the most serious impacts of uncontrolled aviation is generally being overlooked.

News reporter (female # )

The hottest day in history.

News reporter (female #2 )

101 degrees Fahrenheit, it is the hottest day ever recorded in Britain.

News reporter (female #1 )

It’s never been hotter in Britain.

News reporter (female #3 )

Temperatures for the last week are already around 10 degrees above average.

News reporter (male #1)

So it’s clear that global warming is reality.

Narrator

The hottest years on record have all occurred since 1990 and the rise in temperature of our seas is creating extreme weather patterns worldwide.While it is accepted that this heating up may be a natural process, scientists are convinced that the addition of our own pollution is a cause for concern.

Professor Mike Hambery

What’s happening now is that it is being accelerated by the increased greenhouse effect as a result of pollution of the atmosphere, particularly the input of carbon dioxide and we are now seeing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere which are higher than at any other time in the last two million years.

Narrator

Professor Hambery joins the majority of world scientists in agreement that increased carbon dioxide will raise the earth’s temperature by a minimum of 1.4 degrees over the coming decade. And while 1.4 degrees may seem like very little to be concerned about, we have to go back 15 million years to find a comparably warm client.

Prof Hambery

15 million years ago there were no northern hemisphere ice sheets, there was no Greenland ice sheets, there were no mountain glaciers or anything like that, that water was in the sea, resulting in higher sea levels at that time.

Narrator

As debate continues about just how fast the polar ice sheets are melting today, Professor Hambery raises concerns about the glaciers and ice caps close to home.

Prof Hambery

The smaller glaciers, particularly the mountain glaciers and ice caps in places like the Alps or Norway, North America, these are now rapidly disappearing, but if these melt we are talking about sea level rises predicted to be of the order of ¼ to ½ metre by the year 2100.

Narrator

The increased volume of water in our seas is already damaging our coastlines with knock on effects being felt further inland.In 2004 the Treasury Department calculated the national cost of global warming caused by air travel alone is 1.4 billion pounds every year. Yet the airline industry only contributes half of that amount back to the Treasury each year.In a bid to avoid paying the costs, a number of corporations have decided to deny the very existence of global warming.

Mark Lynas

Global warming is definitely with us now, I mean there is some very striking changes which you can see just in terms of the weather, somewhere like here in Britain for example there has been a big increase in the amount of flooding that we have been seeing in the winter months and actually it has been doubling since over the last 30 years and in other places, other parts of the world it has been getting drier as a direct result.

Narrator

During the research for his book, Mark Lynas travelled across five continents investigating the impact of global warming.Trekking in the Peruvian Andes he returned to a glacier which his own father had photographed back in 1980.

Mark Lynas

This glacier which I went back to to see what it looked like, had completely disappeared, I was expecting some kind of change but it had disappeared and the same kinds of impacts are being seen now on mountain ranges right across the world.It is a global phenomenon, this is a global change in temperature that is affecting all of the earth quite dramatically.

Narrator

Back in Wales, sea defences are now proving to be so inadequate that millions of pounds of public money is being spent on the construction of ever higher barriers.Cheaper airfares are encouraging more of us to fly each year and the resulting carbon dioxide pollution is growing at an alarming rate.Some fear that a conflict of interest may stop the government from supporting less polluting forms of transport.

John Stewart

The government is very close to the aviation industry, it sees the aviation industry as a key component of globalisation which it believes in, and also it is very aware that if it did try to stop cheap flights, it might be branded as stopping people having their holidays in the sun.

Narrator

But people are seeking out alternative ways of exploring our planet. When a young couple emigrated from Britain to Australia, they chose the most environmentally friendly mode of transport in the world to get them there.After thousands of miles in the saddle, the effects of burning fossil fuels was all too clear by the time they reached India.

Lowanna King

Kev and I have had earache, constant sore nose, swollen glands and we don’t have a cold we don’t have any illness, it is just that is how polluted it is here in Delhi. It is quite scary that people have to live here.

Narrator

Arriving in Iran they felt sure of their decision to try a different method of transport other than the aeroplane.

Kevin Doye

Well I am standing in the middle of Isfahan’s famous Zayandeh River, or at least I am standing where the river used to be, there hasn’t been any rain in some parts of Iran for over two years and the views from the tea house under the bridge aren’t quite as green and pleasant as they used to be.With local fears about global warming and climate change, it has confirmed to us our decision to cycle and not fly back to Australia.

Narrator

Shortly after the couple left Iran, flash floods swept across the country killing 120 people. It is this unpredictable nature of our change in climate which has finally brought governments of the world together.Since 1991 the United Nations climate talks have been trying to negotiate agreed targets for the reduction of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.Despite thousands of people dying in landslides, floods and heat waves every year, and over one million plant and animal species facing extinction, a decade of discussion has produced little in the way of a workable solution.

Protestors

No more blah blah blah, action now!

Narrator

Every climate change conference held in every country has seen public demonstrations urging governments to implement real solutions.

Male protestor

We have to stay here until they can decide something for real and not just blah blah blah.

Narrator

In London climate campaigners are now targeting businessmen who they believe have been involved in hindering the climate change agreements.[Sir Mark Moody Stuart is hit by a cream pie thrown by a protestor]

Interviewer

What do you think Mr Stuart? What is your reaction?

Sir Mark Moody Stuart

Surprised, people are welcome to express their opinions, I hope they got the right person.

Narrator

Climate activists have pointed out the former chairman of Shell Oil, claiming his influence is allowing multi-national corporations to dodge responsibility for climate change.All across Europe, activists from campaign group Rising Tide have been using videos to encourage community groups, individuals and organisations to take more direct forms of action in tackling climate change.

George Marshall

Every year thousands of people fly from around the world to go to what is enormous jamboree climate change talk shops and then they all fly back.Very, very little is changing as far as I can see the main beneficiaries of this international process at the moment are the companies who fly them there.

Narrator

The financial world’s response to the crisis has been to invent a scheme for turning our pollution into profit.Planned to begin in 2005, their carbon trading scheme will allow each country to produce a legal amount of carbon dioxide pollution each year, go over the limit and heavy fines will be imposed, but any country that does succeed in reducing its emissions, can sell its carbon credits to balance the levels of the more polluting nations.

George Marshall

On the face of it carbon trading seems like quite a good idea; everybody gets an amount that they are allowed to pollute and people who manage to reduce below that level get to trade the difference. So you could say well it is an incentive for reducing.The problem is that by setting that level, we are setting in concrete the principle that those people are allowed to pollute in the first place.

Narrator

Granting industries the right to legally pollute is just one of many concerns about the scheme.Carbon trading may also allow large corporations to take ownership of our atmosphere.

George Marshall

As soon as you start allocating the property rights, you are actually privatising the atmosphere and really what you are creating is a vast new speculative carbon market and the ultimate beneficiaries of that are not going to be the climate, they are not going to be the developing countries, they are actually going to be the world’s financial community.

Narrator

George and his colleagues in the Rising Tide network have been taking their message directly to the people attempting to profiteer from climate change.Representatives from the United Nations and the government met with the oil companies in a hotel basement to discuss the implementation of carbon trading, instead the delegates received a presentation they hadn’t planned on.

George Marshall

The big issue that really faces all of you is we hear many many times the argument that well we have to have this, we have to have this because it is the only way that we can go ahead, the simple fact of the matter is that we believe this is not going to work and what you are discussing here is simply not going to work – it is diversionary tactic to draw attention from the real needs whilst at the same time it isn’t going to work.This is a protest because we actually believe that there is a right to express some kind of emotional engagement with this as well and we also didn’t seriously believe that if we did this any other way that you would actually listen to our point.

Male official

Excuse me Sir, can I stop you there...

George Marshall

We are totally in denial about climate change about what it means, every scientist is telling us that this is a huge crisis, every scientific institution is telling us we have to do something about it and yet nothing changesIt is like people who are suffering from lung cancer and they just keep smoking, we keep doing it.

Male official

Ladies and gentleman, I am very sorry for that, you have our apologies.

Narrator

In the Netherlands the largest single producer of carbon dioxide is Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport. When construction was set to begin on its fifth runway, climate activists broke into the airport just before dawn.Concerns about global warming are so strong that previous demonstrations even forced the national airline to ground its aircraft; on this occasion the Dutch environmentalists blockaded a main runway, forcing the airport to shut down its operation.[Male protestor speaks in Dutch with on-screen captions] When Manchester Airport planned to put a second runway through this valley, the public launched the largest civil disobedience campaign against aviation ever seen across Britain.People from all over the country came to defend the forests. Anne Wynne-Jones even left her job in North Wales to live amongst the trees.[Anne Wynne-Jones speaks in Welsh with on-screen captions]

Male protestor

Mindless vandalism is what has been committed by the people that want to build this runway, what we are doing maybe classified to them as criminal damage, but it is morally justified and morally defensible.

Narrator

Masked men were hired in an attempt to bring a swift end to the demonstrations, however, the protest still continued on for two years costing the airport over 7 million poundsBut did the demonstrations and the destruction of the countryside persuade Manchester Airport to rethink its expansion plans?

Sally Sykes

I would take issue with the notion that we are destroying the countryside, I mean clearly putting a runway down does involve some disruption but the reason why we have got our planning permission is because an inspector concluding his planning report said the case for the second runway was overwhelming.

Narrator

The second runway at Manchester was eventually built, but protests against airport expansion had continued elsewhere such as in Swansea.As construction continues at the airport on the Gower Peninsular, local people are being trained by activists from Manchester to take more radical steps in their protest.

Ian Williams

There seems to be no route for us to go through the proper channels, the council is not listening to us, I have written three letters to assembly members with no answer at all, I think it is time to upgrade what we are doing, to take a stronger action.

Female protestor

That’s great.

Larch Jukes Maxey

'One thing you might want to do is what you did then, which is the person with the key then goes off away somewhere so actually they can’t check you for the key but we can access it if we need to.'Everyone knows that it is bad to drive a car, but what people don’t realise is that aviation is actually far more polluting, it is the most polluting way to travel. We are trying to get that message across as well as directly opposing expansion of Swansea airport, so I am here to help train these people, these local people and show that if everyone does something, we can actually stop it.

News reporter

Air Wales is closing its operation in Swansea and moving services to Cardiff, the company says not enough people were making the most of the cheap flights from Swansea Airport to places like Amsterdam and Dublin.

Narrator

In the history of powered flight, we have advanced rapidly from that first twelve second journey in 1903 to the enormous fuel burning airliners of today.Within that short time we have produced enough pollution to dangerously alter our fragile atmosphere.If aviation is to continue serving us, the airline industry will have to accept the true cost to our planet and the cost to a generation of people not yet born.