Steve Hawkes
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Nearly half the British public have vowed to fly less in the coming year to help the environment, according to a new survey that will alarm airlines struggling with record fuel prices and the fallout from the credit crunch.
An exclusive poll for The Times shows that 46 per cent of consumers have pledged to cut air travel while 23per cent will fly only with those airlines that have a clear green strategy.
More than three quarters - 81 per cent - feel that airlines still are not doing enough to tackle social and environmental issues.
The survey also reflects the strength of anger towards British Airways over the Terminal 5 debacle, in which hundreds of flights were cancelled and which forced an apology from Willie Walsh, the BA chief executive.
Nearly two thirds of the public believe that Mr Walsh should have resigned and 57 per cent say that they are unlikely to fly with BA again.
More than 80 per cent believe that the chaos at Terminal 5 has damaged the reputation of British industry.
Giles Gibbons, the founder of Good Business, said: “The fact that over half say they are unlikely to fly BA in the future as a result is very striking. If even a fraction act on this intention, it will have a real and sustained impact on BA into the future.”
The survey comes amid growing concerns about airlines' financial health given spiralling fuel costs and the marked downturn in consumer spending.
Both easyJet and Ryanair have given warning this year that profits will miss City expectations and analysts fear that BA will follow suit over the coming months.
BA raised its fuel surcharge yesterday to £79 for a one-way, long-haul journey to cope with the bigger fuel bill.
The public's perception of the efforts made by airlines to address environmental concerns is slipping, with each carrier's rating down on a year ago.
Virgin Atlantic remains the airline with the best reputation for tackling environmental issues after Sir Richard Branson's high-profile “green” campaigns of the past two years.
He has vowed to dedicate all the profits from his transport businesses over the next decade to developing alternative fuel sources.
In February, Virgin flew a Boeing 747 with one engine powered by biofuel.
Ryanair comes bottom, while easyJet, its low-cost rival, is judged fourth, below BMI and BA.
Last year easyJet called for all aircraft operating since 1990 to be grounded by 2012 to reduce carbon emissions.
Andy Harrison, chief executive of easyJet, also unveiled a design for a new “eco-plane”, insisting that it was capable of cutting CO2 emissions in half by 2015.
Mr Gibbons said: “Virgin maintains the clear advantage over everyone else. It came to the issue before everyone else did and started taking action.”
The survey, carried out by Populus, shows that the idea of carbon off-setting has yet to take off, with 41 per cent still unsure about what the term means.
Approximately half do not know what projects they are funding when they do offset.
— McDonald’s publicity blitz over healthier food and better working conditions appears to be winning over the public. The burger chain has achieved its highest rating in the index that measures people’s attitudes towards some of Britain’s biggest brands — 39. This means that the majority of consumers still avoid it, but the rating is up ten points on a year ago.
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The government is only supporting the global warming CO2 con for taxation reasons as it sees this as yet another stealth tax opportunity but once the money stops coming in, what next? It was planning to tax suitcases but we dont travel any more. 17th century mobility ahead.
porrit, Khartoum,
We would all agree that getting planes out of the air is good news for the environment. In the case of BA, it is time that they invested in fast trains. Diversification is needed in every business plan. Now would be a good time to do so for BA and other airlines. They could buy British Rail.
Jim Wills, Brisbane, Australia
Agreed, Bill, people will fly if it is cheap. But it won't be for long due to rising fuel costs. US airlines plan to reduce available seats. Easyjet and ryanair will be adding "hidden" costs and the price of oil continues to rise rapidly. Eco-friendliness will have negligible impact in comparison.
Prash, London, UK
The general public readily admit that they will reduce flying for fear of being branded eco terrorists but the reality is different. BA will continue to survive and thrive. Scientists have declared today that they have got the global con (sorry warming) wrong. Watch how they all now jump ship.
Henry, Oxford, UK
Why do the British Press insist on talking about T5 as "damaging the reputation of British industry"?
Around 300 flights were cancelled, which sounds like a lot. But most were domestic with another one an hour later. American Airlines cancelled 3,300 flights in a week which has not been mentioned!
Karl, Warfield, UK
What horrifies me is that the desire to expand Heathrow will in real terms lead to the early preventable deaths of dozens of people brought on by a toxic combination of highly polluted air and noise pollution - a government dept has concluded expansion will lead to 'increased morbidity'
christian, London, UK
Total bunkum.People will still fly if it is cheap enough,BA will do fine excellent and their frequent flyer program among the best. Virgin's only contribution to the environment is adding more flights - McDonalds is healthy and EF - NOT.
Bill Atkins, Rehoboth Beach, USA
BA has been dysfunctional since the forced merger of BOAC and BEA and apparently the Union set up at heathrow reflects the pre-merger days some 30 years ago.
BA should be split up and the old BOAC and BEA resurrected in place of british Aeroflot
james baillie, hamburg, germany