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Measuring the environmental efficiency of the global aviation fleet
Institution:1. Department of Industrial Systems Engineering and Product Design, Ghent University, Technologiepark 903, Zwijnaarde 9052, Belgium;2. Antwerp Maritime Academy, Belgium;3. Department of Information, Logistics and Innovation, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands
Abstract:This research analyses the environmental footprint of the airline industry in an attempt to highlight potential paths for improvement. We develop a directional economic-environmental distance function (DEED) which accounts for the production of both desirable and undesirable output and the potential for constrained increases in input utilization. This research applies the modeling framework to analyze the potential to reduce noise and airborne pollutants emitted by aircraft–engine combinations given the current state of aeronautical technology. The global aircraft–engine market is viewed from the regulatory perspective in order to compare the single environmental and operational efficient frontier to that of the airline carriers, and environmental objectives. The results of DEED are then applied in order to substitute the fleets serving Schipol, Amsterdam and Arlanda, Stockholm airports in June 2010 with the benchmark aircraft. The results highlight the inefficiencies of the current airline fleets and that the IPCC values of externalities are a magnitude of TEN too low to encourage changes in the global fleet hence the need for government intervention.
Keywords:Directional distance function  Economic-environmental efficiency  Aircraft environmental impact  Environmental costs
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