The Air Quality Impact of Aviation in Future-year Emissions Scenarios


Book Description

The rapid growth of aviation is critical to the world and US economy, and it faces several important challenges among which lie the environmental impacts of aviation on noise, climate and air quality. The first objective of this thesis addresses the requirements of section 753 of the US Energy Policy Act, and entails the quantification of present and future-year regional air quality impacts of US Landing and Take-Off (LTO) aviation emissions. In addition, this thesis characterizes the sensitivity of these impacts to variations in the projection of non-aviation anthropogenic emissions (referred to as background emissions). Finally, the implication of a future-year background emissions scenario on the current policy analysis tool, the response surface model (RSMv2), is discussed. Aviation emissions for 2006 are generated using the Aviation Environmental Design Tool (AEDT), while future-year aviation emissions are developed for 2020 and 2030 using the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Terminal Area Forecast (TAF) and the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) Committee on Aviation Environmental Protection (CAEP/8) NOx Stringency scenario #6. Background emissions for the year 2005 and 2025 are generated from the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) National Emissions Inventory (NEI), and two additional sensitivity scenarios are derived from the emissions forecasts. Uncertainties in present and forecast aviation and background emissions are also characterized. The Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) model is evaluated to quantify its performance in predicting ambient PM2.5 and ozone concentrations, and it is used to estimate aviation air quality impacts of aviation. Future-year aviation particulate matter (PM2.5) concentrations are found to increase by a factor of 2 and 2.4 by 2020 and 2030, and are dominated by nitrate and ammonium PM. Aviation 8-hour daily maximum ozone is seen to grow by a factor of 1.9 and 2.2 by 2020 and 2030, with non-homogeneous spatial impacts. Aviation PM2.5 varies by +/-25% with a +/-50% variation of the forecast change in background emissions, while changes in ozone impacts are less symmetric at +34%/-21%. The RSMv2 is shown to under-predict future-year aviation nitrate and ammonium PM2.5. Finally, the implications of these results on the aviation industry and on aviation policy are discussed.




A Response Surface Model of the Air Quality Impacts of Aviation


Book Description

Aviation demand is expected to double in the coming decades, and there are growing concerns about its impacts on the environment. Governments seek to mitigate the impacts of aviation on climate, air quality, and noise by setting various emissions and noise regulations. However, there are complex interactions among these three impact pathways which must be carefully considered. The FAA is developing an integrated suite of software tools to allow policy makers to explore the tradeoffs among these environmental impacts for various regulatory options, and to weigh them against the costs to the aviation industry of those regulations. One component of this tools suite is the Aviation Environmental Portfolio Management Tool (APMT) which is designed to analyze industry economics and environmental impacts. Within APMT, there is a desire for faster models that can analyze multiple policy scenarios for decades into the future in order to inform policy decisions on a reasonable time scale. One particular need is that for a fast surrogate air quality model that relates changes in aviation activity to changes in ambient pollutant concentrations. In this thesis, a response surface model (RSM) is developed for the high-fidelity, but time-consuming, Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) simulation system. The RSM relates changes in aviation emissions in the United States to changes in ambient concentrations of particulate matter, the main driver of the air quality impacts on public health. Specifically, the surrogate model takes in yearly inventories of landing-taxi-take-off cycle fuel burn, sulfur oxides, nitrogen oxides, and non-volatile primary particulate matter, and returns the resulting changes in ground level annual average ambient particulate matter concentrations. The RSM design space is set to capture likely emissions scenarios over the next 20 years. A low discrepancy sequence is used to generate the 27 CMAQ sample points in order to allow the flexibility of adding more CMAQ simulations as necessary without disrupting the coverage of the design space. Three formulations are then explored for the particulate matter RSM, two kriging models and one regression model. A leave-k-out cross-validation is performed to select the final RSM formulation and analyze its error behavior with the addition of successive CMAQ training points. Finally, the RSM is compared to a previous surrogate model based on the intake fraction method. The ordinary least-squares regression model is found to perform better than the two kriging formulations, yielding a root-mean-square prediction error of around 1%. The error decays at a rate of just over 0.01% with the addition of each of the last 5 CMAQ runs. Running the RSM with a baseline emissions inventory then yields an estimate of the air quality and subsequent public health impacts of current aviation emissions. A Monte Carlo simulation provides uncertainty distributions on the RSM outputs. The net increase in risk of adult premature mortality due to aviation-reported as the number of new incidences across the modeling domain-is estimated at 210, with a 95% confidence interval between 140 and 290. The total cost of the increased risk of adult premature mortality, as well as of several other health endpoints, is estimated at $1.21 billion with a 95% confidence interval between about $370 million and $2.15 billion (year 2000 US dollars). These estimates are roughly half of those given by the prior intake fraction model. Of these total impacts, 30% are found to stem from emissions of volatile organic compounds and volatile particulate matter from organics, another 30% from emissions of sulfur dioxide and volatile particulate matter from sulfur, 28% from nitrogen oxide emissions, and about 11% from non-volatile particulate matter emissions.




Understanding Airport Air Quality and Public Health Studies Related to Airports


Book Description

"TRB's Airport Cooperative Research Program (ACRP) Report 135: Understanding Airport Air Quality and Public Health Studies Related to Airports explores the following air quality issues: the literature regarding standards and regulations; issues at airports; health impacts and risks; and the industry's current understanding of its health impacts." --




Aviation and Climate Change


Book Description

It is generally accepted – the US administration excepted - that the emissions reduction targets agreed in the Kyoto Protocol are only the beginning of what needs to be achieved in international climate negotiations. While studies suggest that major emission reductions by industrialized countries can be achieved at low economic cost, both these and early reductions by developing countries are inevitably a major political challenge. This book focuses on European policy toward climate change, specifically its ramifications for the aviation industry. With air travel predicted to grow enormously in the coming years, the issue of climate change is hugely topical for this important industry. Accessible to students, academics and practioners, this book is useful reading for all those with an interest in climate change, the aviation industry, or both.







Aviation and the Global Atmosphere


Book Description

This Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Special Report is the most comprehensive assessment available on the effects of aviation on the global atmosphere. The report considers all the gases and particles emitted by aircraft that modify the chemical properties of the atmosphere, leading to changes in radiative properties and climate change, and modification of the ozone layer, leading to changes in ultraviolet radiation reaching the Earth. This volume provides accurate, unbiased, policy-relevant information and is designed to serve the aviation industry and the expert and policymaking communities.




Sensitivity of the Ozone Layer, Climate, and Public Health to Changes in the Location of Aviation Emissions


Book Description

Aviation's impact on the ozone layer, climate, and air quality varies based on the location of emissions. Changes from subsonic aircraft emissions due to regional growth, and the potential re-introduction of supersonic transport flying in the stratosphere present new scenarios that regulations do not currently address. To quantify the atmospheric impacts of aviation emissions, past studies have used global chemistry-transport models. However, these models are not practical in the context of policy analysis because of their high computational costs and lack of uncertainty quantification to support decision-making. Using atmospheric emission sensitivities derived from the GEOS-Chem chemistry-transport model, I develop a new reduced- order, probabilistic model to calculate the ozone, climate, and air quality impacts from aircraft emissions for a full range of possible flight altitudes and latitudes. The current model reports results based on the average of five years of atmospheric impacts. Applying this model to multiple emission scenarios, this thesis explores the variation in environmental impacts across subsonic flights on the basis of flight distance, and across potential supersonic flights with differing cruise altitudes. Results show that short-haul flights have the greatest air quality-related health impacts per unit of NO[subscript x] emissions compared to mid- and long-haul flights. These differences are driven by surface PM2.5 changes, which lead to ~8400 premature mortalities per Tg NO[subscript x] from short-haul emissions, about 1.6-1.8 times greater than estimates from mid- and long-haul NO[subscript x] emissions. The results from subsonic and supersonic fleet indicate that the ozone, climate, and air quality impacts from NO[subscript x] are most sensitive to changes in the altitude of emissions. Subsonic emissions are estimated to increase the global ozone column by 0.33 Dobson Units (DU) per Tg NO[subscript x], while a supersonic fleet flying 18-21 km causes 6.6 DU of ozone destruction per Tg NO[subscript x]. However, this stratospheric ozone depletion also leads to ~13,000 fewer mortalities per Tg NO[subscript x] from decreased population exposure to surface ozone. As changing aircraft emissions introduce a variety of new environmental consequences and tradeoffs, understanding the sensitivity of atmospheric impacts to the emission location is essential to inform policies and future aircraft technologies.




Air Pollution


Book Description




Towards Sustainable Aviation


Book Description

Aviation is integral to the global economy but it is also one of the main obstacles to environmentally sustainable development. It is one of the world's fastest growing - and most polluting - industries. What can be done to retain the economic and other benefits it brings, without the associated pollution, noise, congestion and loss of countryside? In this volume, industry, policy and research experts examine how to address the problems, and what it would take to achieve genuinely sustainable aviation - looking at technological, policy and demand-management options. Without far-reaching changes the problems caused by aviation can only multiply and worsen. This work seeks to take an important step in diagnosing the problems and in pointing towards their solutions.




Principles of Civil Aviation


Book Description

Seminar paper from the year 2009 in the subject Transportation Science & Technology, grade: 1,0, University of Applied Sciences Wildau (Wildau Institute of Technology (WIT)), course: Master Studies in Aviation Management, language: English, abstract: This paper tries to concentrate on the main influences of aviation on the environment such as noise pollution and its effects on humans as well as the growing impact of aviation on the atmosphere and on climate change itself. Aviation has a number of environmental impacts that are experienced by local residents in the vicinity of airports and under flight paths. Noise has been the focus of concern over all the years of growth in aviation and more recently air pollution and the health effects of air pollution from aircraft have begun to cause concern. The following chapter will inform about these issues: Glossary Introduction Noise pollution Effects of noise on humans Influence on the atmosphere Impact of aviation on climate change Sources