4AIR Business Aviation Analysis Finds Small Changes to Aircraft Routings Could Reduce Environmental Impact

•New comprehensive analysis by 4AIR reveals that altitude adjustments on just 50 flights out of 16,888 could reduce the contrail impact by more than 50% overnight •4AIR’s report provides insights into the impact of contrails and NOx from a sample of business aviation aircraft over the course of one year •In a majority of the flights with the worst contrails, business aviation has a unique opportunity to fly above the contrail regions, reducing CO2 and non-CO2 emissions •The report also lays the groundwork for 4AIR’s new contrail monitoring and reporting service, ahead of 2025 regulation requiring non-CO2 monitoring under the EU ETS


Cleveland, Ohio, May 28, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- In one of the largest international studies of its kind, 4AIR, the aviation sustainability solution leader, has found that small altitude adjustments on business aviation flights could have a substantial impact on reducing their contrail impact on the environment without CO2 tradeoffs.

Contrails, or condensation trails, are a product of aircraft engine emissions interacting with the right combination of temperature and humidity in the upper atmosphere. Depending on the location and time of day, long-lasting or “persistent” contrails can have an outsized warming impact, trapping and absorbing heat that otherwise would radiate back into space. Studies have estimated the overall net impact from contrails and non-CO2 emissions to be about twice that of CO2 alone, contributing to two-thirds of aviation’s total warming impact.

The study, the largest flight-by-flight contrail footprint in business aviation, encompassed over 16,000 flights and over 27,000 flight hours and identified specific opportunities to mitigate contrails in order to reduce the impact from non-CO2 emissions.

According to the analysis, adjustments on just 50 flights out of 16,888 would have reduced the non-CO2 impact from this sample by more than 50% overnight.

In conjunction, 4AIR has also completed six months of a contrail avoidance pilot program, launched in collaboration with Flexjet in Europe. The program incorporated contrail forecasts into the dispatch process to optimize flight paths and minimize the time spent in contrail forming regions. Where possible, flight paths were adjusted to modify cruising altitudes above these regions and notes were shared with pilots to calibrate climbs or descents to minimize time spent in the contrail regions.

“The results of this study demonstrate both the challenges and opportunities with reducing aviation’s footprint from contrails” said 4AIR President, Kennedy Ricci. “Effectively reducing our contrail warming impact requires considering contrails on every flight, but successfully avoiding contrails on just a handful of flights would have a major impact, potentially without CO2 tradeoffs.”

Normally these contrail regions are thin, extending just 2,000 – 4,000 feet, but exist at the upper end of a commercial aircraft’s service ceiling. These business aviation aircraft, which have higher service ceilings, were found to have the unique opportunity to fly higher than the contrail formation region, reducing both CO2 emissions and their contrail impact instead of needing a tradeoff between the two. Flying higher does come with a slightly higher impact from NOx, but more research is needed to better understand NOx emissions lifecycle as well as its comparison to CO2.

The analysis also found that contrails were at their lowest levels during the months of July and August, when demand to travel is usually at its peak.

The study utilized one of the leading weather-based contrail prediction models available today. Key results from the study include:

  • Of the over 16,000 flights, if just 0.3%, or 50 flights, had been able to minimize their contrails, it would have reduced the overall contrail impact up to 51%; minimizing contrails from 0.73% or 123 flights would have reduced it up to 75%.
  • Of the 23 flights with the highest contrail impact, accounting for around 35% of the total contrail impact, 65% of the flights could have avoided or minimized their impact by flying higher, resulting in reductions of the CO2 and contrail impact.
  • About 18% of flights created a contrail, and 69% of those contrails had warming impacts.
  • 31% of contrails were estimated to have cooling effects, but they only offset the total contrail warming impact by about 13%.
  • The average contrail was estimated to persist for around 2.5 hours with the more impactful warming coming from contrails that persisted around 6.5 hours.

The lessons learned from the report lay the groundwork for 4AIR’s contrail reporting service, which helps operators better understand their specific non-CO2 impacts ahead of new regulation. Starting in 2025, the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme (EU ETS) will include non-CO2 under operators’ monitoring and reporting obligations. 4AIR’s service is currently available upon request to select partners.

To download the full study, please visit here.

About 4AIR

4AIR is an aviation industry pioneer offering sustainability solutions beyond just simple carbon neutrality. Its industry-first framework seeks to address climate impacts of all types. It provides a simplified and verifiable path for aviation industry participants to achieve meaningful aircraft emissions counteraction and reduction. The 4AIR framework offers four levels, each with specific, science-based goals, independently verified results and progressively more significant impacts on sustainability that make it easy for private aviation users to pursue sustainability through access to carbon markets, use of Sustainable Aviation Fuel, support for new technologies and other strategies. For more information, visit www.4air.aero.

Attachment

 
4AIR Business Aviation Analysis Finds Small Changes to Aircraft Routings Could Reduce Environmental Impact

Contact Data