QUICK SEARCH:
 
Latest News
Aviation International News
Airshow & Convention News
AIN Defense Perspective
AIN Air Transport Perspective
Business Jet Traveler
AINalerts
AINmxReports
AINtv
AIN Blogs


SUBSCRIBE NOW...

SPECIAL REPORTS

Bizav Web Directory
Visit our directory of manufacturers, suppliers and service providers

Issue Archives
Search through years of
AIN past issues


CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Search through the latest
events and conferences



REPRINTS

RSS Feed



Bizav’s carbon conundrum

Single News Page

Does the environmental regulators’ goal for shrinking business aviation’s carbon footprint border on impossible?

With Europe set to begin cap-and-trade of aviation emissions in 2012, and Congress working on legislation that would cap the greenhouse gases that have been linked to global warming, Conklin & de Decker cofounder and president Bill de Decker is sounding the alarm for just how seriously the plans could affect business aviation.

Under H.R.2454, the “American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009,” the goal is to reduce CO2 emissions to 17 percent of 2005 levels by 2050, with intermediate reductions to 97 percent of 2005 levels by 2012, 80 percent by 2020 and 58 percent by 2030.

Applying his company’s new CO2 calculator, de Decker has estimated business aircraft emissions out to 2050 using forecasts and a 1-percent fuel-efficiency gain per year driven by technology advances. By de Decker’s calculations, in 2012, U.S. business aviation’s emissions are expected to be 15 million tons, while the allowable limit will be about 11 million tons; in 2020, 19.5 million versus about 9 million tons; in 2030, 33.6 million versus 6.6 million tons; and in 2050, 33.3 million versus 1.9 million tons.

“To meet the 2050 target will require an improvement in efficiency for the fleet of
8 percent for each year of the next 40 years if we keep on using jet-A and the fleet grows as forecast,” de Decker told AIN. “That is three to four times the average annual improvement in efficiency we have actually experienced between 1965 and today,” he said, calling that scale of improvement a “near impossibility.”

Burning one gallon of jet-A creates just over 21 pounds of CO2 and burning one gallon of avgas creates just over 22 pounds of CO2. Given these basics, the only way
for aircraft to decrease CO2 emissions is to increase fuel efficiency.

“The imagination of the design engineers is unbounded, but I think it will take us only partway to the target,” de Decker contends. “From a practical point of view, achieving the target is almost impossible without also having a drastic reduction in the growth of the fleet, extensive use of biofuels and extensive purchases of CO2 offsets.”

De Decker notes that the jury is still out on whether biofuels are really as carbon neutral as claimed, with some articles countering that ethanol is far from carbon neutral. “In either case,” de Decker predicts, “we are looking at serious constraints on growth and substantial increases in cost.”

Back

Share This Article With Others

Tweet thisDigg thisRedditBookmark on deliciousStumble thisShare on FacebookFave on Technorati

Related Articles

Researchers continue to study alternative fuels for aviation
March 01, 2010

As government and industry plan for more environmentally friendly energy sources, companies continue to invest in and research alternative fuels...

 
Operators still struggle with ETS
February 22, 2010

The European Commission’s latest list of operators subject to the emissions trading scheme (ETS) is still incomplete and inaccurate, according...

 
Euro Aviation Emission Plan a Bureaucratic Mess
February 18, 2010

The European Commission’s latest list of operators subject to the emissions trading scheme (ETS) is still incomplete and inaccurate, according...

 
CAAS and SIA Aspire To Reduce Emissions
February 02, 2010

The Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS) and Singapore Airlines (SIA) have signed a joint agreement to join the Asia and Pacific...

 
Dayton U Gets $50M Syn Fuel Research Grant
February 01, 2010

The University of Dayton Research Institute (UDRI) was awarded a nearly $50 million six-year research grant from the Air Force to develop...