
Bizav Organizations Hit Back At Greenpeace
The industry responded to a report about CO2 emissions from private aircraft heading to the World Economic Forum.
In response to a recently published white paper by Greenpeace highlighting the CO2 emissions from business aircraft headed to the annual World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, the European Business Aviation Association (EBAA), National Business Aviation Association (NBAA), and the National Air Transportation Association (NATA) have issued a rebuttal statement.
For officials and other people heading to the event, business aviation offers more benefits than other forms of transportation, the groups noted. Davos is in a remote, mountainous area, and, while travel to it from London by train takes a full day each way, by private aircraft that span drops to just 1.5 hours. Private aviation also offers a higher degree of security, which is important to government officials and business leaders.
The organizations pointed to their industry’s track record of progress in sustainability, with continuous improvement driven by research and development leading the push toward the decarbonization of the aviation sector. The conference organizers partnered with Jet Aviation this year to make sustainable aviation fuel book-and-claim service available to visitors.