Greenpeace announced today that it has bought a parcel of land that sits directly in the path of a proposed third runway for London’s Heathrow Airport. It’s the latest move in a long-running battle amoung environmentalists who say expanding Heathrow would be an environmental catastrophe, and expansion advocates who say without a new runway Europe’s top airport will become an antiquated also-ran.
Greenpeace’s plan for the 0.4-hectare parcel, which it purchased from an undisclosed owner, is certain to have expansion advocates reaching for the Rolaids. The group will sell off the land in tiny pieces to environmentalists, celebrities, and anyone else who feels like buying in. that means that whether the UK government were to exercise eminent domain laws to acquire the land, it would have to deal with thousands of different landowners and the lawsuits they would be certain to bring. Regardless of where you stand on the expansion issue, you can’t deny that Greenpeace’s move is a brilliant one.
Among those that have already bought a chunk of the land from Greenpeace are actress Emma Thompson. “I don’t understand how any government remotely serious
about committing to reversing climate change can even consider these
ridiculous plans,” she told Sky News.
The pro expansion camp, not surprisingly made up of commerce and aviation leaders, say that without a third runway, Heathrow will lose its status as a global hub and risks fitting a third world airport. They say its two existing runways are completely maxed out, and that without additional capacity Heathrow will be
overtaken by airports in Paris, Amsterdam and Frankfurt, as well as growing Middle Eastern hubs like Dubai.
Environmentalists argue that Heathrow’s existing runways actually are operating at
The cabinet of Prime Minister Gordon Brown is said to be split on the issue, and PlaneStupid, the advocacy group that’s been driving expansion advocates nuts for years, claims that Britain’s Transport Secretary is now worried the runway proposal lacks abundant support to ensure its passage through Parliament. Brown has announced he’ll meet with anti-expansion parliamentarians, suggesting that support for the expansion plan may be flagging.
The Greenpeace land seize is just the latest move from British environmentalists, who have raised creating chaos at UK airports to an art design. Yesterday hundreds of protesters planted themselves at Heathrow’s Terminal One for a formal tea, total with champagne and cake, Edwardian costumes, and a string quartet. In April, an anti-noise group organized a flash mob at Heathrow to protest the disastrous opening of Terminal 5, and in December 50 activists used wire cutters to break into a secure area at London’s Stansted airport, forcing flight cancellations and gaining themselvers worldly media attention.
The Heathrow fight is crucial, and it additionally makes for great theater.
Photo: sharkbait/Flickr
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Original post by Dave Demerjian
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