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April 2003
Brussels will become a no-night flight zone, if
certain action groups get their way. As the elections loom, discontent
over the routing of flights over the city is mounting.
Residents on Brussels’ northern
outskirts protest that they are being kept awake so that the rest of the
capital can sleep. They complain that since last November, most day and night
flights have been redirected their way. They are demanding a wider dispersal of
the 250 planes per day that fly over their homes.
The rerouting was introduced so that aircraft
would fly over ‘less populated’ areas. But affected residents point out that
more than 100,000 people live under the new flight route.
This has prompted residents in other parts of
the city to get together and demand a
complete ban on night flights. “We are trying our utmost to make this an
election issue,” says a spokeswoman for Air Libre, an umbrella group of 20
Brussels residents committees which wants a reduction in daytime flights.
To publicise its point, Air Libre and Awacss –
which represents residents on the eastern fringe of Brussels recently blocked
an access road to the airport. “Our main purpose was to make decision-makers
aware that we also exist,” Michel Fouarge, founding member of Awacss,
explained.
Actie Noordrand/Daedalus, an action group
representing northern residents, says that calls to ban night flights miss the
point, because they don’t address the issue of daytime air traffic. “The
biggest problem is the concentration of flights over the northern suburbs,”
says Roger Vermeiren of Actie Noordrand. During the day time, Vermeiren
explains, a plane roars over the rooftops of northern residents on average
every six minutes, increasing to every two minutes at peak hours.
Actie Noordrand would like to see the map above
the city¹s skies redrawn to remove the concentrated flight corridor. It argues
that distributing the nuisance would dilute overall suffering. “Two flights an
hour may be a little annoying, but one flight every couple of minutes is
unbearable,” says Vermeiren.
But other neighbourhoods want a total ban on
night flights. "In our opinion, there is no alternative to banning night
flights," Awacss's Fouarge insists. "(Actie Noordrand) want to
decrease the flights above their heads and increase those over ours. It is not
realistic, as we know that only one noisy flight during the night is enough to
wake you up."
Rather than redistributing day traffic, Air
Libre want a cut in the total number of
daytime flights leaving the airport. It says this can be done by making
better use of seating space on aircraft, from the current level of 55 per
flight to 98, a target achieved at Schipol, Amsterdam.
All this poses a problem for Transport Minister
Isabelle Durant (Ecolo). If she delivers on a deal struck in January to
redistribute night flights, she may alienate her constituents in Schaerbeek and
the predominantly francophone residents of Brussels, who currently enjoy silent
night skies.
Brussels City Council, along with other inner
city communes and Air Libre, is trying to reverse the January
agreement. “The decision to disperse flights over several corridors
contradicts reports provided by an international panel of experts. They
recommended that flight routes be concentrated over less populated areas, for
security and cost reasons,” an
Air Libre spokeswoman said.
The issue is a hot potato for Durant. If she
tries to keep the current routes in place, she risks being accused of currying
favour with Walloon voters at the expense of the Flemish residents who live
under the concentrated flight paths. If the Green minister pushes for a
complete ban on night flights, she is in danger of being shot down by liberal
and labour
ministers fearing a loss of business and jobs at the airport.
Parcel courier DHL, responsible for most night
traffic, has threatened to pull out of Belgium if those flights are banned.
This could cost more than 3,000 jobs. But Air Libre and Awacss dispute the
economic case for maintaining night flights. “As citizens, we are not allowed
to mow our lawn on Sunday, but airplanes may fly over our heads. We are not
allowed to make noise between 22.00 and 05.00, but the airplanes are,” argues
Fouarge.
Air Libre says a study carried out in Brussels
demonstrates that the €11 million health costs associated with night flights
outweigh the €6 million in tax revenue from the airport. It also estimates that
the airport produces 25 percent of the capital’s air pollution, costing the
economy some €400 million in indirect costs.
This article appeared in the 25 April 2003
issue of the Bulletin
ã2004 K. Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website
is the copyright of Khaled Diab.