
By Kit Dillon
Kit Dillon is a writer focused on bags and travel gear. He has worked for Wirecutter for a decade and lost count of the number of bags he has tested.
Flying from Hawaii, where I live, to just about anywhere in the world requires at least one 2,400-mile leg of cross-ocean air travel—that’s roughly the width of the continental US. Not an ideal situation for someone trying to minimize his climate-change impact while still seeing far-off friends and family once a year.
Air travel produces up to 3% of global carbon dioxide emissions each year and 10% of transportation-related emissions in the US—and the problem’s not going away any time soon. Shorter flights have the potential to go electric; efforts take place in the margins where the complicated math of battery weight versus power output begin to make sense. But pound for combustible pound, nothing comes close to good old-fashioned jet fuel for keeping the big planes in the sky.
Curious if I could mitigate my own impact, I started researching air-travel carbon offsets, hoping to do a guide to those worth buying. Many airlines, online booking sites, and standalone companies offer programs claiming to offset the greenhouse gas emissions of your flight with a small fee: usually less than $20. (Technically, a carbon offset is a transferable credit, issued by a government or independent regulatory body, that represents the emission reduction or the capture of one metric ton of carbon dioxide from the environment.) I spoke with carbon-offset experts, airline sustainability managers, nonprofit consulting groups, heads of aviation industry groups, and climate ethicists, and I sifted through years of evolving coverage and research.
Not surprisingly, I didn’t discover any air-travel carbon offset programs that we could recommend. I say “not surprisingly” because we encountered similar pitfalls when we investigated carbon offsets for laptops and so-called carbon neutral shipping. Katie Okamoto, our sustainability editor, wrote, “it’s really hard, as a shopper, mid-checkout, to know whether the extra money you’re spending will go toward effective and lasting climate reduction projects.” In most cases, carbon offsets do not capture or reduce real emissions, and they have a dismal record when it comes to actually averting future emissions. Air-travel carbon offsets are no different, as our colleagues at The New York Times concluded. What’s worse: Even if the projects these offsets supported were effective, they are so inexpensive (about $19, for instance, for a round trip on Hawaiian Airlines from Honolulu to New York) that what you pay wouldn’t come close to negating your share of environmental damage caused by flying.
What is the true carbon cost of flying?
So what should you do instead of buying airfare offsets?
Footnotes
Sources
Further reading
Does Buying a Carbon Offset for Your Laptop Really Help the Planet?
by Kimber Streams
Carbon offsets may seem like a solution to alleviate the environmental costs of a laptop, but there are other, more immediate ways you can make a difference.
Don’t Be Fooled by ‘Carbon Neutral’ Shipping
by Katie Okamoto
Clicking the carbon neutral box at checkout might make you feel good, but it’s better to focus on changes that more directly reduce greenhouse gasses.
Every Device Will Die Eventually. Here’s How to Shop for a New One More Sustainably.
by Kimber Streams
We have six tips to reduce the carbon footprint of the new gadget you need to buy.
A Heat Pump Might Be Right for Your Home. Here’s Everything to Know.
by Thom Dunn
Here’s the single biggest change you can make to reduce your home’s energy use.
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