Interesting tidbit in USA Today: air travel is down worldwide. According to the underlying source, Airports Council International:
- Passenger numbers in North America declined 5.2 percent from 2008 to 2009, while passengers worldwide declined by 1.8 percent.
- Air cargo dropped even faster, declining 7.9 percent worldwide.
- 62 percent of airports worldwide lost traffic in 2009.
The major cause, of course, is the lousy economy, though ACI puts a portion of the blame on travelers’ fears of H1N1. It’s also hard not to believe that a contributing factor, at least in North America, is the increasingly unpleasant flying experience.
From a climate perspective, air travel is worth monitoring because it represents a significant share of total carbon emissions in its own right. But I also suspect (though I can’t say for sure) that it’s a halfway decent proxy for carbon emissions from other sources. Reduced air cargo, for example, is probably an indicator that global industrial production is down too.
Elaine
Given the Alaskan plane crash in the news, I suggest changing the punny title of this post out of respect for the lives lost.
Eric de Place
It’s changed, Elaine. I hadn’t read the news when I wrote this post. But anyhow, I like the new title better.
Elaine
Thanks, me too!