One in four Germans support short-haul flight ban - survey
Handelsblatt / Wirtschaftswoche
Nearly one in four Germans support a ban of short-haul flights, according to a YouGov survey commissioned by news agency dpa, Handelsblatt One in three Germans (34%) is in favour of raising taxes on flights to make them less attractive and 26 percent of those surveyed opposed any change to short-haul flights. In addition, half of the respondents said they would support a speed limit of 130 kilometers per hour or less: 43 percent of those surveyed would be in favor of a speed limit of 130 kilometers per hour on highways, and 7 percent would be in favor of a speed limit that is even lower. 17 percent would be in favor of a limit above 130 kilometers per hour. Around one in four (27 percent) reject a general speed limit.
Cutting back on short-haul flights and raising taxes on international flights has become a key campaign issue for the Greens and Social Democratic Party (SPD) and their climate protection policies. Green Party chancellor candidate Annalena Baerbock has said she would seek to ban short-haul as well as cheap flights. SPD rival Olaf Scholz has also come out against cheap flights, which have often resulted from airline price wars. Scholz is calling for a minimum price of 50 to 60 euros per flight, Thomas Stölzel writes in business news weekly . EU climate commissioner Frans Timmermans likewise took aim at the aviation industry, telling Funke-Mediengruppe, “Nobody has to fly 10 or 12 times a year." If the citizens limit themselves to one flight per year, then no problems arise, "neither for the climate nor for your own wallet". The SPD advocates a speed limit of 130 kilometers per hour in its election programme, as do the Greens in their draft programme, which has not yet been approved by the party conference.