A demonstration will be held at Frankfurt airport on Saturday to ban short-haul flights. In their opinion, flights below 500 kilometers should no longer exist.
Frankfurt – France has shown the way: short-haul flights within the country are prohibited there – whenever the destination can be reached by train within a maximum of two and a half hours. If this rule of thumb applied in this country, all flights from Frankfurt to Düsseldorf, Hanover, Stuttgart and Nuremberg would be omitted. These cities can be reached from the central station by train in one hour and 26 minutes, two hours and 19 minutes, one hour and 18 minutes and two hours and 16 minutes.
And so also in Germany there is talk of the future of short-haul flights. The Greens have included the topic in the federal election campaign. The coalition agreement between SPD, Verdi and FDP states: “We want (…) to promote the rail link of the hubs and reduce the number of short-haul flights through better rail links”.
Frankfurt Airport: “Noise and pollution levels are already too high today”
The joint action plan of the Federal Association of the German Aviation Industry and Deutsche Bahn AG also provides for the ever-increasing replacement of short-haul flights by rail. But: “We still don’t notice anything”, says Wolfgang Heubner of Sachsenhausen of the Alliance of Citizens’ Initiatives (BBI), who today calls for a demonstration at Terminal 1 of Frankfurt airport against short-haul flights and for prohibition of night flights from 22:00 to 6:00
“Already today, in the summer of 2022, the noise and pollution levels are too high,” says Heubner. Air traffic must therefore be “drastically reduced” and reduced to “an absolutely necessary level”. “Air travel is the most climate-damaging means of transport,” says Heubner. According to the Federal Environment Agency, a plane emits 214 grams of climate-damaging greenhouse gases per passenger-kilometer on a route within Germany, a car 154 grams and a train 29 grams.
Aircraft noise opponents at Frankfurt airport: switch to the railway
According to Heubner and his colleagues, minimization of flight movement can be achieved “relatively easily” by banning short-haul flights up to a distance of 500 kilometers. “Most short-haul flights can be moved relatively easily by rail,” says Heubner. “The time advantage is on many train routes.”
The Sachsenhausen citizens’ initiative took a closer look at travel times by train and plane to a city less than 500 kilometers from Frankfurt. In any case, the time needed to go from one main station to another was taken into consideration: once by plane, once by train. This included an hour and a half of stay at the airport before departure and waiting times at the baggage claim.
Consequently, the train to Düsseldorf, Hanover, Stuttgart and Nuremberg has a clear advantage: it takes more than an hour less to reach these destinations by train than by plane. This also applies to the trip to Berlin. The train journey takes four hours and 13 minutes. By plane it takes four hours and 46 minutes. Brussels can also be reached by train in three hours and 18 minutes. It takes three hours and 27 minutes by plane.