Nine environmental non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have
defended a Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) as being “fundamental” for
the new Lisbon airport, a process that, they say, could be concluded in October
2023.
A “fast decision on Lisbon Airport will only be legally
valid with a serious, participatory and transparent Strategic Environmental
Assessment”, say the organisations in a statement.
The NGOs, which in July 2020 formed a coalition to
judicially challenge the validity of the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)
carried out on the Montijo complementary airport project, consider that “no
more time should be wasted”, and appeal “that it should be started as soon as
possible”.
According to the associations, if the process begins now to
define the scope of the SEA, with the participation of all the “key actors”, it
will last three months, with the environmental report being ready between six
to eight months later.
NGOs want to be part of the process from the beginning. And
they propose that nine “critical decision-making” factors be taken into account
in the SEA: the conservation of nature and biodiversity; the need for
mitigation and adaptation to climate change; public health (air, noise, water)
and safety; air traffic operating efficiency and capacity; sustainability;
transport; ordering and competitiveness.
“Unfeasible”
The NGOs also consider that “limits of exclusion” should be
considered, beyond which a given alternative should not be considered. In the
statement, the organizations reaffirm that the use of the Montijo air base as a
complementary or main airport is “unfeasible from the point of view of
aeronautical safety, environmental, protection of biodiversity and public
health”.
And they add: “We also consider that the maintenance, beyond
what is strictly necessary, and the expansion of Portela airport are
unfeasible, both from an environmental point of view and from the safety and protection
of public health”.
Integration
In the statement, referring that efforts to mitigate climate
change must be present in all plans, programs, projects and public policies,
the NGOs consider it “imperative” to articulate the airport plan with the
National Railway Plan.
The NGO group is made up of the Association for the Defense
of Cultural and Environmental Heritage of the Algarve (ALMARGEM), Associação
Natureza Portugal, in association with WWF (ANP/WWF), Christian Association for
Studies and Environmental Defense (A ROCHA), and Portuguese Association for the
Conservation of Biodiversity (FAPAS), the Group for Spatial Planning and
Environment Studies (GEOTA), the League for the Protection of Nature (LPN), the
National Association for Nature Conservation (Quercus), the Portuguese Society
for the Study of Birds (SPEA) , and the Sustainable Earth System Association
(ZERO).