The Difficult Issue of Airports in Île-de-France: Air Transport, Dynamism and Fragility
The Difficult Issue of Airports in Île-de-France: Air Transport, Dynamism and Fragility
Source : ACI and Direction Générale de l’Aviation Civile (DGAC) – January 2003
Before 2020, there are few alternatives to growth in Île-de-France air traffic
Since, after the long debates at the turn of the century (DUCSAI2…), the French Government was not
convinced of the economic and technical realism of alternative solutions such as a third airport or major
development of regional airports, most of the growth in traffic will go via CDG Airport, which has caused
great disappointment among local residents and associations. In an attempt to calm things down, the
French Government has since adopted a significant string of measures3 to reduce noise and pollution,
in particular with night flights being limited at CDG Airport, and to improve compensation for noise and
pollution (increase in budget allocations for noise insulation and abatement, and the “airport community”
project of the Le Grand Report4…). But all of this is doing little to reduce the concern of local residents5,
in particular since, after two years of stagnating, the traffic is on the upturn again.
In spite of the desirable reinforcement of the European role of the main provincial airports – Elizabeth
Bouffard-Savary reports on this subject –, a gradual transfer of a portion of the short-haul traffic to the
very high speed train network which is being built out on a European scale – addressed in an article by
Danièle Navarre – and the possible transfer of certain traffic segments (low-cost, charters or freight) to
secondary airports6, the prospects for growth in traffic at Île-de-France airports remain considerable. It
can be reckoned that demand will be at least 120 million passengers by 20207. Even if the think on a
new airport were to be resumed tomorrow8, since such an airport could not be operational before
another twenty years or so, it will be necessary to find, in the meantime, the means for handling and
coping with the growth in traffic as acceptably as possible, and to seek to integrate the airports better
into their host areas.
(1) It should be noted that airports have a particular status which generally gives them a certain degree of freedom not
enjoyed by other regional development centres with whom they can sometimes be in competition for developing shops and
office programmes. This freedom is increasingly disputed. The regional and local authorities are seeking to control better
what happens on the hubs.
Travel and mobility: from the air transport hub to the land transport hub
A wide variety of modes and of scales of land transport converge on airports. From air transport hubs,
they are becoming land transport hubs.
The share of public transport in access to the airport for passengers and staff is currently too low, and
an increase in that share is being sought.
The search for better complementarity between air transport and the very high speed train network
which is being built out on a European scale is a means for lightening the pressure from demand on the
airports, today for passenger traffic, and tomorrow perhaps for freight.
Source : IAURIF
Progress that is not keeping up with the increase in traffic, and a regulatory framework that is
increasingly stringent
Air transport is an industry with long cycles, since an aircraft remains in service for about thirty years.
There has been significant progress as regards reducing noise and pollutant emissions. Over the
period for 1970 to 1990, the trend was a 1 dB per year reduction for noise, and a 2% per year decrease
in fuel consumption, and thus in pollutant emissions. That trend has slowed since with the gradual
renewal of the fleets and the withdrawal of chapter-2 aircraft and is now 0.5 dB per year for noise, and
1% for fuel consumption. Air transport, taking advantage of the international nature of its activity and of
the high concentration of its industry, has apparently not improved its environmental performance at the
same rate as land transport modes have and, since its traffic is growing much more steeply, its
environmental impact, in particular as regards greenhouse gas emissions, is growing.
An increasingly strict framework is gradually being put in place, from international or European
regulations to commitments made locally, e.g. under charters. Research is mobilised in Europe around
strategy focuses and objectives defined by the ACARE19, but there remains much to do to make airports
bearable neighbours for local residents. For noise abatement, it will require technological
breakthroughs.
The development in the traffic must be accompanied by development in keeping its impacts under
control and in internalising its environmental costs.
For Marc Ambroise-Rendu, President of “IDF Environnement” (Île-de-France Environment), air transport
and sustainable development are not incompatible, “provided that we get started on making them
compatible,” and if air transport meets its environmental obligations, the increase in its cost will show
that it cannot be a mode of transport for the masses.
In Île-de-France, the important levels of noise and pollution are increasingly ill-accepted
In Île-de-France, 1.8 to 2.3 million people live in areas over which aircraft fly at lower than 3000 metres.
Around Orly and CDG, about 50,000 people are exposed to the highest amounts of noise and pollution.
And there are not only 2 airports. There are 25 others, totalling one million movements per year.
Emissions from CDG Airport are of the same order of magnitude as the emissions generated by the
Paris ring-road, the boulevard périphérique.
Significant steps are being taken to assess and to reduce noise and pollution, in particular with the
adoption of a noise index defined on the basis of measurements – rather than on the basis of aircraft
certification data -, and that index will gain in consistence through the increase in the number of
measurement stations20, and with the decisions taken to reduce night flights at Roissy–CDG21. But
much remains to be done, and the level of complaint from local residents is considerable. Such
complaint expresses an increase in the inconvenience related to noise (difficult to define because it
incorporates complex factors) – Bernard Barraqué shows in his article how various researchers are
working to go beyond the medico-acoustic approach to inconvenience, which was the preferred
approach up until now and which does not explain very much. Such complaint also expresses concern
about the impact of air traffic activity on health, and about the future increase in traffic, and loss of
confidence in the official “line.” For Simone Nérome, President of ’ADVOCNAR,22 who, as a doctor, is
particularly aware of the problem of impact on health, it is essential to re-establish that confidence.
Such complaint also expresses a demand for the impartiality of technical experts and assessors to be
guaranteed. The setting up of ACNUSA23, in 1999, is first response to that demand. Roger Léron, its
President sets out its concerns. Among the players who are fighting to reduce noise and pollution, there
are also local councillors. The example of Val-d’Oise, which is the Île-de-France département that is
subjected to the most airport noise and pollution, shows how the council had to organise itself to cope
with its cumbersome neighbour, namely CDG Airport. In particular, it has set up an observation group
and a noise mission24 and it is organising its own measurement campaigns. It is also heavily involved in
debates on reviewing the noise exposure plan (PEB). All of these complaints and questions are also
part of increasing awareness among the populations of problems related to the environment and, more
generally, the debates on the development of air transport, the preferred vector of globalisation, touch
divisions that run deep through our society as regards the type of development that is desirable.
Towards management at airport level
When we read ADP’s annual reports on its environmental policy, we perhaps forget that they are
describing only the action that corresponds to the perimeter for action by ADP. But actually over one
thousand businesses are present on the Île-de-France airports, from large groups to small businesses,
with a very wide range of trades and of environmental impacts. Liabilities are thus diluted through a
very complex interplay of players. Beyond its action in its own field of responsibility, ADP is seeking to
broaden environmental management to the level of the entire local area of the airport and to the level of
all of its players, on the basis of behavioural ethics and an industrial ecology concept that everyone
shares. Such is the approach presented to us by Frank Le Gall, head of environment management at
ADP.
Today, the aircraft remains the safest means of transport (1 death for 2 billion kilometres travelled by
one passenger). Admittedly, the number of accidents has increased since the nineteen seventies, but
the risk per flight has remained stable. However, although they are rare, plane crashes are particularly
dramatic. The crash of the Concorde on July 25, 2000 at Gonesse remains in everyone’s mind.
Insofar as about 85% of plane crashes take place during takeoff or landing2, the areas close to airports
are particularly concerned by this threat. Local residents’ representatives are calling for an “air safety
observatory” to be set up, and they want more transparency on the part of airlines and of ADP. It is the
Direction générale de l’aviation civile (DGAC, or Directorate-General of Civil Aviation) who is in charge
of inspecting aircraft to ensure that they are airworthy3, within the framework of procedures regulated at
international and European levels.
Air transport has regularly been a target for terrorist attacks in flight or against airport terminals, but the
terror attacks of September 11, 2001, in which aircraft were used for major terrorist acts, have put the
spotlight onto the problems of security in air transport and airports, which are part of the State’s
sovereign responsibilities. Since then, the specific policies have been heavily reinforced4, at the price of
heavy investment5. The use of cutting-edge technologies has developed (automatic control and
detection systems, biometry, etc.). The number of employees6 and the cost of security and insurance
for air transport have increased enormously. In addition to internal audits, the airports are subjected to
various levels of audit at national level (Gesac7) and at European level (ECAC8).
(1) Safety concerns prevention of accidents due to technical problems related to the reliability or the maintenance of an
aircraft. Security concerns prevention of intentional acts of malevolence.
(2) 25% of accidents take place during the takeoff and initial height-gathering phase, which represents 2% of the average
flight time, and 43% take place during the final approach and landing phase, which represents 4% of the flight time. Fewer
than 5% of accidents take place during the cruising phase, which represents 60% of the average flight time.
(3) The SFACT (service de la formation aéronautique et du contrôle technique, or aeronautical training and testing service)
acts at certification level, in collaboration with the JAAs (Joint Aviation Authorities, bringing together the civil aviation
authorities of 36 European countries). The groupement pour la sécurité de l’aviation civile (GSAC, or group for civil aviation
safety) is in charge of overseeing the method of manufacture and maintenance of aircraft.
(4) Hold luggage is now 100% inspected.
(5) 230 million, i.e. the price of 2 Airbuses, for ADP, since September 11, 2001.
(6) In 2001, 2000 people were employed by specialist companies for performing security and safety tasks at the Paris
airports, in addition to 200 ADP employees. These figures are respectively 4,200 and 450 in 2003 – Source: Aéroports
Magazine, issue No. 343.
(7) Groupe d’experts sûreté de l’aviation civile (Civil aviation safety assessors group).
(8) European Civil Aviation Conference
The difficult governance of local areas in which airports are located in Europe
The multiplicity of the players, of their interests, and of their strategies further complicates the
management of airport development, which is by nature subject to conflict. In addition, European
airports are often located on the borders of several administrative areas: instead of being at the centre
of one planning area, they are at the margins of several different ones. Everywhere in Europe, be it for
the great public debates conducted on projects for new infrastructures or for attempts to manage better,
on a daily basis, the relations between the airport and its environment, new practices are developing
and new structures are being created in an attempt to go beyond the antagonisms, to build a vision of
the issues that is more broadly shared, and to find compromises that are as acceptable as possible, and
more consistency in the policies conducted. Mention might thus be made of the Airport Consultative
Committees (ACCs) in England, the Communauté Aéropor-tuaire (Airport Community) set up for
Brussels Airport, and the Regionales Dialog Forum in Frankfurt. The very precise contractualisation of
the commitments of airports to the local communities that is implemented in England in the form of a
Legal Agreement is an interesting procedure. In addition to the precise improvements that it makes
possible, e.g. as regards noise and pollution reduction or compensation, or as regards land transport
services, that type of undertaking offers the advantage, for local residents, of having guarantees as
regards the planned development of the airport, and, for the airport authorities, of offering good medium-
term visibility for the programming of their development and of the necessary investments.
However, everywhere in Europe, the conditions on which airport development can be accepted are
always difficult to find.
Roger Jones thus shows us how, for fifteen years, the British Government has been vainly seeking the
location on which to put a new runway in South-East England, where the airport system is highly
saturated. Today, it is more like two or three runways that would be necessary, and the solution is still
as far from being obvious as ever. The recently published White Paper will not close the debate, in
particular since it proposes to build a new runway at Stansted, and also at Heathrow, one of the most
saturated airports in the world. It should also be noted that the idea of a new airport has been
abandoned.
Consultation in the Netherlands is often held up as an example. It is possible that consultation is
facilitated by the national consensus that exists on the development of main port and airport
infrastructures, in a country whose domestic market is limited and whose economy has, for centuries,
been based on international trade. Marielle Prins presents the 2002 Schiphol law, which has regulated
the building of the fifth runway, by setting precise safety and environment limits. But when somewhat
dubious calculation errors were made by the Schiphol Group when defining the noise quotas taken into
account in the law, the Dutch State revised the law so as not to jeopardise the activity of the airport.