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The Costs of Terminal Area Delays

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 January 2010

V. W. Attwooll
Affiliation:
(Royal Aircraft Establishment)

Extract

Delays in the terminal area lead to increases in the operating cost of the aircraft involved. We assess these costs as one criterion of the effectiveness of the air traffic system in the terminal area, and to give a measure of the desirable expenditure on methods of reducing delay (e.g. improved radar, additional runways or even an extra airport). This note discusses methods of assessing the cost penalty of delays exclusively to the airline operator and gives examples for three types of aircraft, a short-range subsonic jet, a long-range subsonic jet and a supersonic transport.

Terminal area delays occur essentially because aircraft apply for use of the runway, either for take-off or landing, in a random fashion and because the acceptance rate of the runway is limited by the need to maintain safe separation between aircraft on and in the vicinity of the runway. Such delays involve penalty to the aircraft operator in terms of extra time and fuel consumed and hence of extra operating cost.

Type
The 17th I.A.T.A. Technical Conference
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1968

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References

REFERENCES

1Attwooll, V. W. (1966). Methods of costing deviations from the optimum cruise flight, with examples from the London—New York route. R.A.E. Tech. Report 66148.Google Scholar
2Attwooll, V. W. (1966). Costing air traffic control deviations. This Journal, 19, 99.Google Scholar
3B.E.A. (19651966). Annual Report and Accounts.Google Scholar
4A.O.R. Branch, Board of Trade (1967). An investigation of factors affecting the capacity of runways.Google Scholar