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  • Commercial aviation helps drive more than 10M American jobs and 5 cents of every dollar of U.S. GDP

  • Commercial aviation drives more than $1 trillion per year in economic activity

  • In 2012, U.S. airlines moved more than 48,000 tons of cargo per day

  • In 2012, the value of a kilogram of U.S. merchandise exported by air averaged 121 times the value exported by sea

  • For every 100 airline jobs, some 360 are supported outside of the airline industry

  • Federal taxes constitute $61 – or 20% – of the price of a typical $300 domestic round-trip ticket

  • In 2011, U.S. airlines carried 16 percent more passengers and cargo using 10 percent less fuel than in 2000

  • Domestically, airlines drive 5% of economic activity but account for 2% of man-made GHG emissions

  • From 2000-2011, airlines reduced GHG emissions by 11% while transporting 16% more passengers and cargo

  • From 1975-2011, U.S. airlines and their partners reduced significant noise exposure by 99%

  • Commercial air travel is the safest form of intercity transportation in the United States

  • In the most recent decade, scheduled air service on U.S. airlines was seven times safer than in the 1970s

  • From 2000-2012, U.S. airlines improved the on-time arrival rate from 72.6% to 81.9%

  • From 2000-2012, U.S. airlines reduced the flight cancellation rate sharply from 3.30% to 1.29%

  • Airfares are a bargain: From 2000-2012, U.S. CPI rose 33% while average domestic fare rose just 13%

  • Adjusted for inflation, the average round-trip domestic airfare fell 15% from 2000

  • 2007 domestic flight delays cost the United States approximately $31 billion

  • In 2012, the value of U.S. merchandise exported by air reached an all-time high of $427B

  • In 2012, U.S. exports of air-travel services reached an all-time high of $39.5B, driving a $5.1B trade surplus

  • In 2012, U.S. passenger and cargo airlines spent more than $50B on fuel, averaging 36% of operating expenses

  • In 2012, U.S. airlines posted the lowest annual rate of mishandled baggage ever recorded

  • FAA projects U.S. air travel demand to top 1 billion passengers in 2027

  • In 2012, US airlines flew 83.4 million passengers in scheduled international service - a record high

  • In 2012, the total value of merchandise exported from or imported to the United States by air exceeded $927 billion

  • In 2012, 7.15 teragrams of merchandise was exported from or imported to the United States by air

 A4A Jet-Fuel Cost and Consumption Report

Plane flying over a field

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The table below reflects current jet-fuel price and consumption data for U.S. passenger and cargo airlines as reported to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics and as assembled by A4A. 

Jet Fuel
CONSUMPTION**
EXPENSE Avg. Paid Price
2013 Gallons % Chg. $ USD ¢/Gal. % Chg.
  (bn) Yr/Yr  (bn) Yr/Yr
April 1.393 0.3 3.929 282.0 (10.0)
YTD 16.845 (3.8) 49.032 291.1 (1.4)


Note: Expenses may include some fuel transport costs but do not include taxes, into-plane fees or expenses associated with hedging programs. The amount paid for jet fuel is a function of long-term contracts, fuel hedge terms, spot market prices and point of sale, among other factors.

A subscription to the report (featuring the following) can be purchased in Microsoft Excel format via A4A Publications:

  • Monthly history, since January 1986, for domestic and international consumption and cost
  • Monthly spot prices of WTI crude oil, Brent crude oil, and U.S. Gulf Coast jet-fuel trend analyses/charts
  • Variance analyses: year-over-year and month-to-month comparisons

 

** Note: The data used to generate our A4A fuel cost and consumption report is provided by the Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS). Within the past few years, BTS has elected to adjust this dataset to parse out regional carrier fuel consumption data that was purchased by a marketing network carrier on behalf of its regional partner(s). Accordingly, for regional carriers that report monthly data, this report includes only fuel cost and consumption data that was actually purchased directly by that regional carrier. As a result, this report does not provide a complete accounting of U.S. airline industry fuel consumption. However, paid jet fuel price remains accurate and relevant. For complete U.S. airline industry fuel consumption levels, please consult the quarterly T2 schedule within the U.S. DOT Form 41 report.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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A4A supports a truly comprehensive, meaningfully balanced U.S. energy policy and is committed to protecting our planet.

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