
French carrierAirFrancewilloffsetthe carbon dioxideemissionsof its 500-odddailyinternal flights by 2020 at a cost of millions of euros, the company's CEO has announced.
In a bid to counteract its climate impact, the company will finance projects that support tree planting, forest protection and the global shift to less-polluting energy, Anne Rigail told Le Parisien newspaper.
"It is an investment of several million euros, she said in an interview published late Monday, adding the company was acting "voluntarily".
Other projects would include banning single-use plastics such as cutlery from local flights as from January, and "to start separating and recycling waste" from October.
The airline industry has been under fire over its carbonemissions, which at 285 grammes ofCO2emitted per kilometre travelled by each passenger, far exceed all other modes of transport, according to the European Environment Agency.
Heavy-duty transportation, freight trucking, shipping and aviation, represent over a tenth of global greenhouse gasemissions, says the World Resources Institute, a research body.
Theemissionscontribute to global warming and climate change, which scientists say will unleash ever harsher droughts, superstorms, and sea-level rise.
In July,Franceannounced it would impose new taxes on plane tickets of between 1.50 and 18 euros per flight, a move criticised byAirFrance.
It is meant to raise about 180 million euros ayearto be invested in greener transport infrastructure.
Rigail said she did not know if there had been a drop in passenger numbers due to a campaign of "flight shaming"spearheaded by 16-year-old schoolgirl Greta Thunberg, who has become a symbol of the fight against climate change.