Google accused of airbrushing carbon emissions in flight search results

(The Guardian, 25 Aug 2022) Tweak to search engine effectively halves the environmental impact stated for each trip.

Google has been accused of airbrushing aviation emissions, after the company changed its flight search engine to halve the CO2 emissions attributed to any given trip.

The change, first noted by the BBC, affects a feature on Google Flights that shows the estimated carbon emissions of each route. The company flags routes with higher or lower than typical emissions, and also reports the total CO2 emitted per passenger on any given journey.

But in July this year, Google pushed through a change that halved the total emission figures it reported. The company had previously reported emissions in kilograms of “carbon dioxide equivalent” (CO2e), a measure that includes the damage to the climate from other aviation emissions, such as water vapour emitted at high altitudes as part of the plane’s contrails, which can have a significantly higher warming effect per tonne than pure CO2.

After the change, Google began reporting just the CO2 emitted on each journey, effectively halving the stated environmental impact of any given flight.

External link

The Guardian, 25 Aug 2022: Google accused of airbrushing carbon emissions in flight search results