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Luton airport: birthplace of legends, and environmental miracles?

Luton airport: birthplace of legends, and environmental miracles?


Simon Calder, also known as The Man Who Pays His Way, has been writing about travel for The Independent since 1994. In his weekly opinion column, he explores a key travel issue – and what it means for you.

Luton: birthplace of legends. I am not thinking here about singer Paul Young or broadcaster Stacey Dooley, but of Europe’s two biggest budget airlines. Luton airport was chosen by young entrepreneur Stelios Haji-Ioannou as the base for a new carrier, easyJet, in 1995. And nine years earlier than that, the Bedfordshire airport was the first destination from Dublin for an Irish start-up called Ryanair.

Since those early days, easyJet has made Gatwick its biggest base, and Ryanair has moved east to Stansted. But both airlines maintain a significant presence at Luton alongside a relative newcomer, Wizz Air.

On Thursday this week I went along to the airport to meet the chief executive of Ryanair DAC, Eddie Wilson. Normally such events are held to promote new routes; this time, the story was new plans. Wilson is deploying three of his new Boeing 737 Max jets to the Beds base, and thereby “reducing noise emissions by 40 per cent and fuel consumption by 16 per cent while delivering 4 per cent more capacity per aircraft”.

That last point – 4 per cent more capacity – intrigued me. The fuselage is exactly the same size as the previous version, yet eight more seats have been fitted in. On board there is no sense of a squeeze, which I conclude is down to the use of slimmer seats.

What intrigued me more is the way that budget airlines are now slogging it out over their concern for the environment.

“Sustainable growth” is the new Ryanair way. “We’re the only airline of scale that is growing, that can materially move the dial in terms of capacity over the next number of years,” the CEO told me.

Wizz Air, meanwhile, announced this week that it is investing £5m in a company called Firefly Green Fuels, which plans to produce sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) from sewage sludge. The Firefly chief executive, James Hygate, says the raw material “is available in vast quantities globally”. (The conversion ratio, I calculate, is 228 tonnes of the unwanted waste to one tonne of SAF.)

Five years from now, the airline plans to be in a position to reduce its annual emissions by the equivalent of 12,000 round trips between Luton and its…

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