Thursday 28th of November 2024

come fly with me.....

 

Pilots at Network Aviation (NA) have voted down three attempts at a new Enterprise Bargaining Agreement. NA pilots are the worst paid in the Qantas group; at present, 70% of NA pilots are paid below award levels, according to the union. Qantas’ says they want a 50% pay rise, but that would only take them up to award levels.

After the last rejection, Qantas went to the Fair Work Commission (FWC) seeking a finding of ‘Intractable Bargaining‘, a last resort Industrial Relations tool to break the impasse of stalled negotiations. If successful, this would see the FWC settle the dispute. NA pilots voted Thursday to continue rolling strikes, and another two-day action planned for next week was announced by AFAP on Friday..

“In terms of conditions, all we want is what every other pilot in the group has,“ a union rep told MWM.  However,

the even bigger problem is that we cannot attract pilots with any experience to the group, and many of our experienced pilots are leaving for much better paid work overseas.

Enter the consultants

And so to McKinsey’s mission which is – and this is not a typo – to ‘make the planes run on time’. An airline’s central task is to supply excellently maintained aircraft to fly their passengers to their destination on time. So, why was Hudson hired if she could not perform this core business task?

Qantas insiders have told MWM the answer is really simple, a simple combination of having enough pilots, engineers and a fleet of aircraft that is big enough, young enough and available.

Hudson’s problem is that she has none of these, so ‘fixing’ the problem will take many years.

McKinsey is the second set of consultants Hudson has called in, with BCG being brought in as soon as she took the top job to help ‘repair the company’s image with passengers’. So far, this appears to have amounted to more Grange wine in the Sydney First Class lounge, as per Qantas Facebook groups, and a slight improvement in on-time performance for the mainline flights (not Jetstar), yet this still sits below pre-COVID levels.

 

READ MORE:

https://michaelwest.com.au/qantas-pilots-strike-and-consultants-galore/

 

 

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https://yourdemocracy.net/drupal/node/49833

 

 

tourisming.....

Exponential growth of tourism

In 1950 there were 25 million international tourist arrivals, in 1970 the number was 166 million, and by 1990 it had grown to 435 million. From 1990 to 2018 numbers more than tripled reaching 1.442 billion. By 2030, 1.8 billion tourist arrivals are projected.

Negative environmental impacts of tourism

The negative environmental impacts of tourism are substantial. They include the depletion of local natural resources as well as pollution and waste problems. Tourism often puts pressure on natural resources through over-consumption, often in places where resources are already scarce.

Tourism puts enormous stress on local land use, and can lead to soil erosion, increased pollution, natural habitat loss, and more pressure on endangered species. These effects can gradually destroy the environmental resources on which tourism itself depends.

Tourism often leads to overuse of water

An average golf course in a tropical country, for example, uses as much water as 60,000 rural villagers. It also uses 1500 kilos of chemical fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides per year.

Tourism and climate change

Tourism contributes to more than 5 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, with transportation accounting for 90 percent of this.

By 2030, a 25% increase in CO2-emissions from tourism compared to 2016 is expected. From 1,597 million tons to 1,998 million tons.

 

https://www.theworldcounts.com/challenges/consumption/transport-and-tourism/negative-environmental-impacts-of-tourism

 

 

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https://yourdemocracy.net/drupal/node/49833

 

 

fake fuel....

Australian aviation is in the news again. Having ripped off passengersillegally sacked workers, and impacted the health of residents under airport flight paths, the industry has now received $30m from taxpayers to manufacture “sustainable aviation fuel” (SAF). And investors and airlines are clamouring for more.

Having “committed to net zero emissions by 2050”, or Net Zero 2050, (Aviation Green Paper, p.1) the federal government says SAF will help maximise “aviation’s contribution” (Aviation Green Paper, p.73).

So, yes. Pigs might fly. Literally and metaphorically.

Literally as pig fat in SAF. And metaphorically because the government’s emissions reduction proposals for aviation can never make flying climate safe.

SAF won’t allow the planet to cool. SAF won’t make flight emissions net zero by 2050. And Net Zero 2050 won’t prevent 2ºC of warming.

SAF won’t allow the planet to cool

2ºC of warming will likely trigger life-as-we-know-it-ending consequences. For an acceptable chance of avoiding them, according to leading climate scientists, we need to do three things, and aviation has a role in two of them. Right now, new emissions need to be cut to near absolute zero at emergency speed to prevent increased warming. At the same time, we need to draw down the CO2 already in the atmosphere to cool a dangerously hot planet. The last time CO2 in the atmosphere was as high as now — 420 ppm — warming hit 3ºC and sea levels ended up 10 metres higher.

We need to stop the warming and start the cooling.

Our government, however, is trapped in the delusion that cooling can be ignored, that drawing down CO2 can safely allow new CO2 emissions. This delusion has a name. It’s called “Net Zero 2050”. And the CO2 reduction claims for Sustainable Aviation Fuel ride on its coat tails.

SAF won’t make flight emissions net zero by 2050

SAF, when burnt, emits the same amount of CO2 as jet diesel, not less. The claimed reduction, compared to jet diesel CO2 emissions, is achieved when CO2 drawn down in growing the SAF feedstock — whether pig or plant — is subtracted from in-flight emissions. SAF’s ‘lifecycle’ CO2 emissions (growing through to burning) are less than jet diesel’s. In this way SAF CO2 emissions can be said to be net zero. As such SAF is then marketed as ‘clean’, ‘green’, ‘sustainable’ and ‘eco-friendly’ — despite preventing cooling.

Even if we ignore the priority of cooling, it’s delusional to think SAF can make flight emissions net zero by 2050.

Firstly, because SAF can only claim ‘net zero’ for CO2 flight emissions. While non-CO2 emissions, including nitrous oxides and contrail cirrus, for a given flight, contribute twice the warming of CO2 alone (Aviation Green Paper, p.78), and can’t be drawn down.

Secondly, in practice, for Australian aviation to get to net zero CO2 emissions, 100% SAF would be required to fuel all flights. Yet, the size of the financial investment and land acquisition required to grow the feedstock, then manufacture and deploy it to all flights — 20 billion litres by 2050 — will, the government agrees, be prohibitive.

Federal transport minister, Catherine King (Aviation Green Paper, p.38), says offsetting will therefore be needed to help make CO2 flight emissions net zero by 2050. But her colleague, federal climate minister, Chris Bowen, disagrees. He has specifically ruled out the use of offsets across the transport sector under Safeguard Mechanism regulations to achieve emissions reductions of 43% by 2030 on the way to NZ2050.

Offsetting allows a tonne of new CO2 flight emissions right now, on the premise that another tonne will be drawn down somewhere, some time later. But in practice that rarely happens. And even when it does it still prevents cooling.

Net zero 2050 won’t prevent 2ºC of warming

Underlying the government’s projected future for Australian aviation sits the delusion that 2ºC of warming will be prevented if CO2 emissions get to net zero by 2050.

Emissions reduction proposals, like NZ2050, should have a near zero risk of failure — as we require for the infrastructure we build — given the threat that 2ºC represents. Yet the IPCC acknowledges a risk of failure for Net Zero 2050 that most would find unacceptable. Warming in 2023 has already nudged 1.5ºC. It will hit 2ºC by the 2040s if significant policy changes are not made, according to current climate models. Indeed, former NASA climate chief James Hansen recently warned that “global warming of 2ºC will be reached by the late 2030s”.

On current plans, the UN reports annual new emissions globally will be no lower in 2050 than they are today. With our government planning for a threefold increase in flights by 2050 (Aviation Green Paper, p.96) actual flight emissions from Australian aviation won’t be dropping either.

In summary, Australian aviation policy is based on these three delusions. In reality, for a chance of holding warming to 2ºC, all emissions need to be reduced at emergency speed. And, because flying is the fastest way to fry the planet, the only way aviation emissions can be cut at the speed required, is by regulating flight reductions to near zero by 2030.

We’re facing the abyss. And our government is telling us we can fly. So will we jump?

https://johnmenadue.com/pigs-might-fly-australian-aviations-delusional-emissions-future/

 

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garbage planes....

British biofuel company Firefly has reached an agreement with the low-cost airline Wizz Air to build a commercial refinery that will help convert sewage into sustainable aviation fuel (SAF).

According to Firefly, which has developed the conversion process, the fuel is still undergoing regulatory testing. If approved, it could be used to power aircraft, the company said this week.

The refinery, the first of its kind, will be built in Essex and could start delivering commercial supplies of SAF by 2028 to serve London’s airports. There is potential for two more such facilities in the UK, according to Firefly.

Wizz said it was investing by making a massive order for up to 525,000 tons of Firefly’s waste-based fuel over the next 15 years.

Meanwhile, utility company Anglian Water has announced it will provide Firefly with biosolids from its wastewater treatment process for a pilot facility.

Firefly chief executive James Hygate said biosolids are “kind of disgusting stuff” but “an amazing resource.” 

“We’re turning sewage into jet fuel. I can’t really think of many things that are cooler than that,” he added.

SAF production uses 70% less carbon than conventional jet fuel, but is currently significantly more expensive to produce.

According to Paul Hilditch, Firefly’s chief operations officer, “there’s enough biosolids in the UK for more than 200,000 tons of SAF” – which he said is sufficient to satisfy about half of the mandated SAF demand in 2030.

READ MORE: Brits look to kitchen waste to power jets

Converted sewage should be cheaper and more abundant, and could provide 5% of the fuel needs of airlines in the UK, Hilditch claimed.

 

Under a government mandate, at least 10% of fuel used by airlines in the UK must be made from sustainable feedstocks by 2030.

https://www.rt.com/news/595805-human-waste-fuel-planes/

 

 

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