Brussels Airport (BRU)

Belgian State has to pay millions to residents in the vicinity of Runway 01/19 of Brussels Airport

Share

On 22 October, the Brussels Court of Appeal has ruled in favour of more than 300 residents living in the so-called Oostrand, the vicinity of runway 01/19 at Brussels Airport, who have complained of improper landings on runway 01 since February 2004.

A reading of the judgment shows that it concerns more than 300 inhabitants of the municipalities of Kraainem, Wezembeek-Oppem and Sint-Pieters-Woluwe, who complain about noise from planes flying overhead, complaints that have worsened since February 2004 and the distribution plan of then Minister of Mobility Bert Anciaux.

The court of appeal admits that the runway configuration allows for flights over very densely populated areas, at low altitudes, and thus noise during landings, especially because the runway is short.

The court states that the Belgian State “made mistakes in deciding on the preferential use of runway 02 (note: now called 01) on 28 February 2004” and by changing the wind standards in August 2003, making this short runway more used. According to the court, these decisions almost doubled the use of 02/20 for landings between 1997-2003 (8,876 per year) and 2004-2018 (15,759 per year).

In March 2017, the Court of Appeal had already established the fault of the Belgian State with regard to Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights establishing the right to the protection of a healthy environment, for the period from 8 February 2004 until 31 December 2011.

Now, and in the same spirit, the Court of Appeal condemns the fault of the Belgian State for the subsequent period, namely from 1 January 2012 to 31 October 2018, by leaving the door open for new actions on the basis of evidence for the period after 31 October 2018 and up to today.

For these two periods, the Court ratifies this fault under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which enshrines the right to the protection of a healthy environment. The Court recognises a public health problem on the basis of the level of noise pollution suffered by residents which exceeds the noise thresholds set by the World Health Organization (WHO).

The Court also established that the damage suffered by residents during years of excessive air pollution must be repaired by awarding them significant damages (several million euros) on the basis of their location within the contours of noise.

On the strength of the success of their trial, the residents demand that the Belgian state restore their rights, otherwise new actions for compensation will be taken. Local residents are therefore waiting for the Belgian State to change its wind component instructions for the use of runways so as to no longer use runway 01 abusively.

This post was published on 29 October 2020 15:39

André Orban

M. Sc. Engineering

Published by
André Orban

Recent Posts

Eindhoven Airport expands use of lifting aids to ease baggage handlers’ workload

Eindhoven Airport has added seven new lifting aids in its baggage hall, bringing the total…

1 May 2025

Dubai Airport welcomes 23.4 million guests in Q1 2025, sets new monthly record

Dubai International Airport (DXB) saw a strong start to 2025, welcoming 23.4 million passengers in…

1 May 2025

Finnair cancels 140 flights on May 2 due to industrial action, affecting 12,000 passengers

Finnair announced it will cancel approximately 140 flights on Friday, May 2, due to a…

30 April 2025

Greece orders 8 Airbus H215 helicopters to strengthen wildfire response

Athens has signed a deal with Airbus Helicopters for eight H215 helicopters, with options for…

30 April 2025

Air France-KLM Group posts stronger Q1 2025 with €161M operating improvement and €783M free cash flow

Air France-KLM began 2025 with a €161 million year-on-year improvement in operating result, bringing Q1…

30 April 2025

Lufthansa lands Airbus A380 in Denver for the first time

Lufthansa has operated its first-ever Airbus A380 flight to Denver, marking a milestone for both…

30 April 2025