Dutch court scraps cap on number of flights at Amsterdam airport

The Dutch Supreme Court has overturned a government plan to cap flights at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport at 478,000 annually. The court ruled the decision lacked proper motivation, failing to consider varying aircraft noise levels and the actual im...

Agencies
The Dutch Supreme Court on Wednesday scrapped a government decision to limit the number of flights at Amsterdam's Schiphol airport, ‌one of ⁠Europe's busiest ⁠hubs.

The court said the 2024 decision to limit the number of flights to 478,000 per year, made in an effort to cut noise pollution, had not been properly motivated.

The government was not immediately able ⁠to comment ‌on the ruling, a spokesman said.


Airlines had appealed the government's decision as ⁠they said it went too far, while climate activists and people living near the airport had appealed for more restrictive action.

The court said the government decision had failed to take into account that different airplanes produce different levels of ‌noise, thereby setting an inappropriate general cap on the number of flights.

It said it was ⁠also unclear that the installed cap would in fact lead to the intended reduction in noise pollution.
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The court did allow a reduction of nighttime flights, as none of the parties had appealed that part of the government's decision.
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