‘Cheap pollution’ means taking the train to Europe is FOUR TIMES the cost of flying – report
Flying is cheaper on more than 70% of 100+ European routes
UK has continent’s biggest price difference between planes and trains
Rail is at least five times less polluting than flying
Taking the train on your European hols will cost you four times the price of a flight on average, according to a new report from Greenpeace. The study compared ticket prices on more than 100 routes between major European cities and found that trains were on average twice as expensive as flying, but four times as much for routes to and from the UK.
The findings come just as many schools break up for the summer holidays (21 July) ahead of one of the busiest periods of the year for UK airports. The huge difference in cost is despite the fact that many rail journeys in Europe are more direct to city centres and at least five times less polluting than flying.
Researchers at Greenpeace compared the cost of train and plane tickets for 112 routes between large cities in 27 European countries. They recorded the prices on nine different dates ranging from four months to just a couple of days before departure to take account of price changes and last-minute deals.
They found that flights were generally cheaper on seven-in-ten (79 out of 112) of the routes. On average, taking a train was twice the cost of flying, but the price difference was much more dramatic on some routes. For example, travelling from Barcelona to London by train was 10 times more expensive on average, and up to 30 times at short notice – the biggest price difference in this analysis.
Flying was consistently cheaper on all 12 of the UK routes in the study, including domestic routes between London and Scotland.
A few low-lights from the UK’s ‘dirty-dozen’:
- Barcelona-London: With three low-cost airlines offering tickets for as little as €12.99 (£11.10), train companies can’t compete. Shifting the 3.36 million annual flights to rail would save approximately 461,000 tons of harmful greenhouse gases – equivalent to the annual emissions of all the cars in Glasgow.
- Edinburgh–London: Europe’s second most popular short-haul flight route offers 3.4 million passengers a far more polluting way to travel each year, despite dozens of train connections every day.
- Bratislava-London: Taking the train to this popular party destination is almost eight times more costly on average, and up to 15 times at short notice. With airlines offering prices as low as €15 (£12.99), and beer prices at less than €3 in Bratislava and around €8 in London, the cost of a flight could be recouped after the third pint (but not the carbon).
The report blames these price differences on an uneven regulatory playing field that benefits low-cost airlines at the expense of the climate and workers’ rights. These airlines operate on four-in-every-five (79%) of the routes included in the study. A recent analysis by Transport and Environment said the UK Treasury was missing out on £4.7billion because it ‘under-taxes’ the aviation sector.
Dr Doug Parr, Greenpeace UK’s director of policy, said: “As millions of Brits head off on their European breaks – many to areas that are being scorched by this historic heatwave – the twisted economics of the transport industry means they are being encouraged to keep throwing fuel on the climate inferno. Flying only looks like a bargain because the cost of pollution is so cheap. Low-cost airlines are paying negligible tax while imposing low wages and poor conditions on staff.”
Many low-cost airlines offer transfer flights that are considerably cheaper than more direct rail connections, emitting up to 10 times as much greenhouse gas. This climate-wrecking practice incentivises passengers to travel from London to Brussels via Denmark, for example, and from Manchester to Cologne via Dublin.
Airlines keep their prices artificially low because they pay no kerosene tax or VAT, and have even received a recent reduction in Air Passenger Duty in the UK. By contrast, train operators have to pay energy taxes, VAT and high rail tolls in most European countries – although no VAT in the UK. Some airlines also save on staffing costs by employing the legal minimum of employees on low pay and poor conditions.
In order to make rail more affordable than air transport, Greenpeace is calling for all short-haul flights to be banned where there is a reasonable rail alternative, and for an end to subsidies for airlines and airports, starting with a phase out of tax exemptions for kerosene and a frequent flier levy. It also calls for European governments to introduce climate tickets – simple long-term tickets that are valid on all means of public transport in a country or region.
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