Title: Carbon Neutral Airports The first Step
1Carbon Neutral AirportsThe first Step
- Dave Covell
- Principal, Carbon and Energy Management Group
- ENVIRON UK
2Overview
- Introduction
- So, whats the issue?
- Emissions boundaries calculations
- Where can we make changes?
- What are others doing?
3Introduction
- ENVIRON is a global environmental and human
health consultancy - Employee-owned partnership, founded 1982
- 65 offices / 1,200 staff worldwide
- Carbon and Energy Management Team offers services
in Europe, Americas and Asia - Been working with UK Airports on energy issues
since 1994
4Some of our Aviation Industry Clients
5So, whats the issue?
- Carbon emissions from fuel and energy use both
direct (e.g. gas, oils) and indirect (grid
electricity) - Increasing operating costs
- Environmental impacts
- Negative publicity
- Emissions may be
- Under direct control of the Airport
- Under the sphere of influence of the Airport
(i.e. use by tenants, suppliers, contractors) - Outside of control or influence (i.e. passengers)
6Where do emissions arise?
7Where do the emissions arise?
- Buildings
- Owned buildings admin, training, technical
- Leased buildings on airport and elsewhere
- Aircraft
- On the ground taxiing, APU use
- In the air
- Ground Transport
- Airside and landside service vehicles tugs,
baggage, bussing, etc - Business-use vehicles, i.e. deliveries,
contractors, etc - Staff (all airport workers) travel to work
- Passenger surface access
8Approximate Emissions Split
Aircraft in the air dependent on type of flight
and destination, but typically 5 to 10 times more
than Airport-related emissions (emissions divided
by two to account for origin/destination airport
share)
9What are the emissions boundaries?
- Buildings
- All on-airport buildings?
- Only those directly supplied energy by the
airport operator? - Only airport related facilities?
- Any off airport facilities owned by airport
operator? - Aircraft
- On the ground and/or in the air?
- Transport
- Only airport operators vehicles?
- Third party vehicles?
- Supply chain?
10Airport Carbon Footprint Comparison
Four airports with similar boundary conditions
11Aircraft on the Ground
aircraft taxi from stand
aircraft taxi to stand
aircraft on stand
APU
GPU
12Calculating emissions from aircraft on the ground
- Taxi to and from stand
- Airports aircraft movement database provides
specific information for each aircraft movement - aircraft registration
- time on stand
- Industry databases provide information on
specific fuel flow for each aircraft - On stand
- Airports aircraft movement database provides
time on stand - APU average fuel flow
- GPU handling agents provide aircraft
registration volume of fuel consumed
13Emissions growth
- For airports, emissions are directly related to
passenger numbers - Passenger related loads
- Air conditioning (plus weather-related)
- Domestic hot water
- Passenger sensitive equipment (travelators,
escalators, baggage handling systems, etc) - Catering
- Vehicle fuel use
- Fixed loads
- Lighting
- Space heating (although weather and passenger
related)
14Airport emissions growth
15Whos doing what?
- Airport operators
- Majority of UK airports (95 of UK air passenger
traffic) are members of Airport Carbon Management
Group - Most larger airports will have a policy and
strategy - Larger airports enrolled in Carbon Management
programmes - Focus is on energy use in terminal and airfield
areas but extending to ground transport and
aircraft issues - Some limited use of renewable energy technologies
- Airlines
- Sustainable Aviation (AOA, funded by DfT)
- Some are engaging in Carbon Management programmes
16Approaches to reducing energy costs and carbon
emissions - Buildings
- Energy efficiency measures
- 10 to 30 is realistic and achievable in many
cases - Technical measures new plant and equipment,
enhanced controls, better lighting, etc - Improved monitoring, control behavioural change
- Renewable energy technologies
- Make good publicity
- Investment costs may be high
- Practical difficulties in certain cases
- Purchasing green electricity but may be
contentious
17Approaches to reducing energy costs and carbon
emissions Ground Transport
- Vehicle efficiency improvements fleet
replacement - Fuel switching fleet replacement (electric,
hybrid, CNG, bio-fuels) - Vehicle fuel mileage monitoring
- Servicing regimes
- Driver training
- Passenger modal shift
18Approaches to reducing energy costs and carbon
emissions Aircraft
- Aircraft in the air
- Efficiency gains through fleet replacement
- Improved operations see Sustainable Aviation
- Aircraft on the ground
- Reduced Taxi times
- APU vs GPU or FEGP
- Long distance tugs
- Single-engine taxiing
19Aviation Industry Next Steps
- Standard approach to airport carbon footprints
- Development of best practice in footprint
reduction - Platform for sharing footprinting knowledge
- Dissemination of footprinting information to a
wider audience?
20Thank you!
- Dave Covell
- dcovell_at_uk.environcorp.com
- 07798 530450
- www.environcorp.com