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Branson
says airlines should pay tax on emissions, by
Eliane Engeler - 25th June 2008
(Credit: AP)
GENEVA (AP) — Virgin Group
chairman Richard Branson told a forum on climate
change Tuesday that aviation is a dirty business
and that airlines should be willing to pay for
the damage they cause to the environment.
The
airline industry has been reluctant to support
carbon-emission taxes but Branson said at the
Global Humanitarian Forum that he was willing
to pay carbon-emissions taxes on his aviation
business.
"If
you run a dirty business — an airline business,
a shipping business, ... coal business, you should
pay for the privilege because you are doing damage,"
Branson said.
The
head of the forum, former U.N. chief Kofi Annan,
also pushed for what he called "climate justice,"
with polluters paying for the damage they cause.
"We
must recognize that the polluter must pay, and
not the poor and vulnerable," Annan said.
"We must have climate justice."
Low-cost
airlines last week called on the European Union
to reject a plan that would force air carriers
to trade pollution allowances, saying it risks
turning potential environmental benefits into
punitive fees for air carriers and passengers.
The
two-day meeting of the new humanitarian forum
brings together aid agencies, governments and
the private sector to address the "human
face of climate change."
Maldives
President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom suggested the proceeds
of aviation taxes on carbon emissions be transferred
to small nations to put in place measures for
adapting to climate change.
The
Maldives, which consist of 1,200 islands in the
Indian Ocean, have said they risk losing their
entire territory to rising sea levels if global
warming continues unabated.
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