'Huge environmental waste' as US airlines fly
near-empty planes
A 96% drop in passenger numbers because of
coronavirus restrictions has not been matched by cuts in flights
Oliver
Milman
@olliemilman
Published
onFri 17 Apr 2020 11.00 BST
The
coronavirus outbreak has provoked a string of unsettling sights, such as the
sudden widespread use of masks, shuttered businesses and deserted streets.
Another unusual phenomenon is also playing out in the skies – near-empty
airplanes flying through the air.
Widespread
travel restrictions around the world have slashed demand for air travel, with
more than eight in 10 flights canceled. But there is a disparity in the US –
while the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has reported a 96% slump
in passenger volume, to a level not seen since 1954, this hasn’t been matched
by the number of flights being scrapped.
Slightly
more than half the flights within the US have been canceled, leading to a slew
of near-empty flights. Less than one in 10 seats on domestic flights were
filled by passengers last week, according to an estimate by Dan Rutherford,
aviation director at the International Council on Clean Transportation.
“The
evidence suggests that the number of people flying is dropping faster than the
flights so there are a lot of empty planes,” he said. “The airlines are left to
figure this out for themselves and they are playing catch-up.”
This
situation is leading to a “huge environmental waste”, Rutherford said, as
planes burn huge amounts of fuel to transport just a handful of people around
America.
In March,
Sheryl Pardo shared a video of her being upgraded to first class and given a
personalized safety briefing after being the only passenger to check in to an
American Airlines flight from Washington to Boston. Meanwhile, a Virgin
Atlantic flight from London to New York subsequently carried just seven people.
The
aviation industry accounts for about 2% of global carbon emissions, although
this is concentrated among the small fraction of the world’s population that
regularly flies. The reduction in flights is expected to reduce pollution
levels, with emissions from the sector dropping by almost a third last month,
the Financial Times has reported.
However,
passenger numbers may well bounce back quickly following the end of the
Covid-19 crisis.
“You have
dips around recessions but within two or three years it returns,” said
Rutherford. “I imagine leisure travel will recover pretty quickly. In the boom
years, airlines have eased off on attempts to improve fuel efficiency – what
was going on was not sustainable. The million-dollar question is whether we
will curb flying to protect the climate, as we are now doing to protect public
health.”
The US
airline industry got $25bn in assistance in the recent stimulus package to deal
with the sharp downturn in business. In return, the airlines are required to
maintain a certain level of service, which may be leading to the near-empty
flights.
The
economics of running an airline can also be counterintuitive in that it can
sometimes be cheaper to fly a commercial airliner to a planned destination than
pay for a spot to simply park it.
According
to Airlines for America, an industry group, more than a third of the US fleet,
about 2,400 aircraft, have been parked, with airlines burning through cash at
more than $10bn a month as cancellations “far outpace” new bookings. Planes
have gone from “load factors” of 80% in January to just 11% in April.
“The novel
coronavirus pandemic has had, and continues to have, a severe and unprecedented
impact on the US airline industry,” a spokeswoman for the lobby group said,
adding that flights are also shifting important cargo such as medical supplies,
food and mail.
Doug
Parker, chief executive of American Airlines, said: “Those that are flying
today are doing so for important reasons.”
A spokesman
for United said it was “still somewhat rare” for a single passenger to be on a
flight and said that the company had made investments in more sustainable fuel
to lower its carbon footprint.
The
commitment of airlines in general to addressing the climate crisis has been
questioned during the coronavirus shutdown, however. Airlines are lobbying to
rewrite the rules of a global agreement designed to tackle aviation emissions,
with the coronavirus outbreak expected to make its targets tougher to meet.
Campaigners
accused airlines of attempting to “dodge their obligations”, but the industry
said it was “a matter of survival”.
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