The Environmental Protection Agency announced in June that it plans to declare commercial airplane emissions a danger to public health because of the role they play in climate change — the first step in regulating airplanes’ emissions and engine fuel efficiency.
Climate change is causing wind patterns to change over the Pacific Ocean, leading to longer commercial airline flight times and causing airplanes to burn more fuel and emit more greenhouse gases.
Those are the conclusions of a Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution published Monday in the journal Nature Climate Change, showing that the shifting jet stream over the Pacific Ocean is increasing flight times between Hawaii and the U.S. mainland, leading to more of the pollution that fuels climate change.
Previous studies that commercial airplanes will be affected by climate change primarily in terms of turbulence. But the U.S. government has recently made moves to look at how climate change is being exacerbated by commercial airplanes, which for account about 3 percent of total U.S. greenhouse gas emissions and about 0.5 percent globally.
The Environmental Protection Agency announced in June that it plans to declare commercial airplane emissions to public health because of the role they play in climate change — the first step in regulating airplanes’ emissions and engine fuel efficiency.
The study shows how airplanes flying into winds made stronger by both natural climate variability and man-made global warming will in turn make global warming even worse. The resulting additional greenhouse emissions from airplanes could increase total global emissions by 0.03 percent as roundtrip flight times across the globe increase, according to the study.
“What we found was that, for the particular airline routes that we focused on, the flight-level wind changes were such that westbound flights should take longer in the future while eastbound flights will be shorter,” study lead author , an associate scientist of geology and geophysics at Woods Hole, said.
Those cycles include the El Niño-Southern Oscilliation, or , and the , which drive natural climate variability over the Pacific, including the position of the jet stream between Hawaii and North America.
“This study is focused primarily on one part of the total picture, as you know, and so points the way to larger studies assessing something more like the whole (airline industry) route structure as currently flown and what might be flown in a changing world,” Penn State geosciences professor said.
, senior lecturer in climate dynamics at the University of East Anglia in the United Kingdom, said the study shows how cruising altitudes over the northeastern Pacific can be altered by both climate variability and climate change and that increasing airplane fuel efficiency would make airplanes less sensitive to those changes.
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