Natural Science

Volume 5, Issue 1 (January 2013)

ISSN Print: 2150-4091   ISSN Online: 2150-4105

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.74  Citations  h5-index & Ranking

Reducing consumption to avert catastrophic global climate change: The case of aviation

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 69KB)  PP. 99-105  
DOI: 10.4236/ns.2013.51A016    5,589 Downloads   8,597 Views  Citations
Author(s)

ABSTRACT

Avoiding potentially catastrophic global climate change is a moral imperative, demanding significant reductions in greenhouse gas emissions from all important transport sectors, including aviation. However, because passenger flights and freight traffic are increasing much faster than efficiency improvements, the aviation sector will not be able to reduce emissions, or even stabilize them at current levels, without direct, forceful action to reduce demand. This paper reviews the ethical principles and empirical realities supporting the case for reducing worldwide aviation traffic. It argues that most passenger air travel and air freight shipping represents unnecessary luxury consumption, which responsible moral agents should willingly reduce in order to mitigate global climate change. It considers several mechanisms for doing so, and contends that they may succeed, but only if combined with an explicit recognition and binding commitment that for the foreseeable future, aviation must be a slow-growth or no-growth sector of the world economy.

Share and Cite:

Cafaro, P. (2013) Reducing consumption to avert catastrophic global climate change: The case of aviation. Natural Science, 5, 99-105. doi: 10.4236/ns.2013.51A016.

Cited by

[1] Virtuous Aviation: Moral Commitment Toward Environmental Issue in Indonesia
2021
[2] Air Travel as an Obstacle to a Low-Carbon Society
2019
[3] Private Governance Responses to Climate Change
2018
[4] Moral encounters in tourism
2016
[5] How Many Is Too Many?
2015
[6] How Many Is Too Many?: The Progressive Argument for Reducing Immigration into the United States
2015
[7] The Moralization of flying: Cocktails in Seat 33G, famine and Pestilence Below
Moral Encounters in Tourism, 2014
[8] From respect for nature to agency as realisation in response to the ecological emergency
2014
[9] Reconciling Effectiveness and Fairness: An Ethical Argument for Bridging the Impasse in the Climate Change Regime
2014
[10] Exploration of the University open sports teaching reform
2014
[11] AVOIDING CATASTROPHIC CLIMATE CHANGE: WHY TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION IS NECESSARY BUT NOT SUFFICIENT
Ethics and Emerging Technologies, 2013

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.