Thousands of people have stopped flying because of climate change
(CNN) — Twenty-four trains, nine countries, 13,500 miles.
They are the numbers behind the epic train journey one man took from Southampton in the UK to eastern China.
Roger
Tyers, 37, spent a month on board trains and over $2,500 -- almost
triple the cost of a return flight -- to travel to the Chinese port city
Ningbo for academic research in May.
It
was the climate crisis, not a love of trains, that drove the
sociologist to choose this complicated route over a return flight. Tyers
told CNN that he felt compelled to stop flying when UN climate experts warned last year that the world has less than 11 years to avoid catastrophic levels of global warming.
Roger Tyers, 37, travelled from England to China by train instead of plane because of the climate crisis.
Roger Tyers
Tyers
is not the only person to shun air travel in response to climate
change. Thousands of people worldwide have publicly pledged to stop
flying, including teenage activist Greta Thunberg, who has inspired
youth climate protests around the world.
They
say there is no justification for flying in a world where governments
have declared climate emergencies and scientists have warned of global
warming's devastating impacts on human health and on the future of countless species.
'Flight shame'
Activist
Maja Rosen launched the "Flight Free" campaign in Sweden in 2018 with
the aim of encouraging 100,000 people not to fly for one year.
Although
only around 14,000 people signed the online "#flightfree2019" pledge,
Rosen told CNN that the campaign had made more people aware of the
urgency of the climate crisis and motivated them to travel by train more
often.
The
campaign sparked a wave of social media posts showing people traveling
by train, accompanied by the hashtags #flygskam and #tågskryt, which
mean "flight shame" and "train brag" in Swedish.
According to a survey
released in May 2019 by Swedish Railways (SJ), 37% of respondents chose
to travel by train instead of plane where possible, compared to 20% at
the start of 2018. An SJ spokesperson said: "Rail travel is soaring
thanks to climate fears."Domestic passenger numbers in July fell by 12%
compared to the previous year, according to Swedavia, a company which operates Sweden's 10 busiest airports.
Rosen,
who stopped flying 12 years ago, says the collective pledge helps
combat the sense of hopelessness many people feel when it comes to
tackling climate change.
"One
of the problems is that people feel there's no point in what you do as
an individual. The campaign is about making people aware that if we do
this together, we can actually make a huge difference," she said.
A
passenger's footprint from an individual flight depends on a number of
factors, including how far they fly and how full the plane is, but also
on what class they travel in: First class passengers are given more
space than economy passengers, meaning they're responsible for a bigger
proportion of the plane's emissions.
Emissions
from train travel also depend on many factors, including how the train
is powered. An electric train powered by clean energy will have much
lower emissions than a diesel-powered train, for example.
Tyers calculated that his train journey to China produced almost 90% less emissions than a return flight.
"It's
hard to understand how polluting air travel is and the amount of energy
and kerosene it takes to put people in the air and get them across the
planet," he said.
Climate crisis
The aviation industry accounts for 2% of man-made carbon dioxide emissions (CO2). By 2050, this is expected to increase to 22% if nothing changes.
A
passenger on a return flight from London to New York generates as much
CO2 as the average person in the European Union does by heating their
home each year, according to the European Commission.
According to the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change many airlines are doing too little to lower their emissions and it remains unclear what their long-term strategy is.
The
International Air Transport Association (IATA), a trade organization of
290 airlines, has set a 2050 target to reduce its emissions to half the
2005 level.
"This is a difficult task as the industry is still growing ... but we are confident it is achievable," a spokesperson told CNN.
They
said the industry plans on using a combination of sustainable aviation
fuels, efficiency measures and new technologies, such as hybrid and
electric aircraft, to slash emissions.
Much of that will need considerable technological advances. Electric batteries, which are projected to power over half of all new cars by 2040,
are not currently powerful enough to keep planes in the sky for long
distances, according to David Romps, a professor of climate science at
the University of Berkeley in California.
Trains, on the other hand, can further reduce their carbon footprint by being electrified and connected to clean electricity.
"If
you want to really push change in the right direction, support the
industries that have the potential to become part of the solution,"
Romps said.
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