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Abstract

Issue Title: Special Topic on Carbon Budgets

The allocation of CO2 emissions to specific sources is a major policy issue for international aviation, especially for determining allocations for emissions trading schemes. This paper addresses the problem by recommending a possible methodology to allocate emissions to specific sources using detailed air traffic data. The basis for the calculations is an air traffic sample for one full-day of traffic from the UK. In order to analyse aircraft fuel burn use and hence CO2 emissions, the Reorganized Air Traffic Control Mathematical Simulator (RAMS Plus) and the Advanced Emission Model (AEM III) are used. The results from these detailed simulations are compared with two of the most widely-used aviation CO2 emission estimates to have been made for the UK: the SERAS study and NETCEN estimate. Their estimates for the year 2000 are 26.1 and 31.4 Mt, respectively. In addition, the most recent NETCEN estimate for the year 2003 is 34.1 Mt of CO2. Our estimate of total aviation CO2 emissions, using detailed simulations and real air traffic data, is 34.7 Mt for the year 2004. In addition, emission estimates are compared with two global aviation emission inventories: AERO2K and SAGE. Contributions of the highest-emitting flights and aircraft types are identified. International departures dominate; 6% of flights account for 50% of total emissions. The largest aircraft emit the most per flight-km, although not per passenger-km. Different methodologies and their implications are also discussed. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Estimates of UK CO2 emissions from aviation using air traffic data
Author
Pejovic, Tamara; Noland, Robert B; Williams, Victoria; Toumi, Ralf
Pages
367-384
Publication year
2008
Publication date
Jun 2008
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
01650009
e-ISSN
1573-1480
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
198533392
Copyright
Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2008