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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

 Questions and Answers on Automatic Dependent Surveillance Broadcast (ADS-B)

Safety & Operations section: man refueling a plane

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Q: How is the position of each airplane currently determined?
 
A: Since the 1940s, surveillance – or position information – has been provided to air traffic controllers by a nationwide system of radar stations. While radar has been the backbone of air traffic management for decades, it has several inherent deficiencies. First, radar is costly to install and maintain, requiring electro-mechanical units atop multiple towers located around the country. Second, radar is less effective in mountainous regions because the signals can be blocked by the terrain, and is not practical for oceanic coverage. Third, radar is relatively imprecise: radar antennas rotate at certain rates, resulting in positions displayed to the controller that may be up to several seconds old.
 
Q: What is ADS-B?
 
A: Automatic Dependent Surveillance Broadcast (ADS-B) technology is a revolutionary technology that has the potential to replace radar-based surveillance. An ADS-B -equipped airplane continually determines its precise location using a network of satellites and transmits a ‘data packet’ once per second, which includes information such as aircraft flight number, airspeed, type of aircraft and whether it is turning, climbing or descending. This data transmission is received by a network of ground stations and other equipped aircraft, and then sent on to an air traffic controller workstation, providing controllers and other aircraft a more precise location for each aircraft.
 
Q: What kinds of benefits does ADS-B offer?
 
A: The ADS-B position information that the controller receives is far more precise than today’s radar positioning. This offers a number of benefits.
 
The primary benefit of ADS-B is that it is a fundamental building block for the Next Generation National Airspace System (NextGen).
 
In addition, the ADS-B data packet sent to air traffic controllers can also be received by airlines and other parties to facilitate better system management by all users and service providers. In the near future, airplanes themselves can be equipped with an ADS-B receiver, which will enable real-time cockpit displays of weather and traffic, both on the ground and in the air. The positioning information displayed will allow each airplanes’ pilots to “see” other nearby airplanes. Ground vehicles can also be equipped with ADS-B, making them visible to controllers and pilots and reducing the risk of surface collisions.
 
Further, the precise positioning data delivered to controllers should safely enable reduced airplane separation standards, which would allow more aircraft to safely occupy a given volume of airspace, reducing congestion and delays. Additionally, more efficient routing enabled by ADS-B results in less fuel burn, and reduced emissions. Unlike radar, ADS-B data doesn’t degrade with distance or terrain.
 
Q: What are the components of ADS-B?
 
A: The basic surveillance system requires that each airplane be equipped with a GPS receiver and an ADS-B transponder. A ground network of small cabinet-sized ADS-B stations must also be installed. For future applications, airplanes must be equipped with ADS-B receivers and enhanced cockpit displays.  
 
Q: Where has ADS-B been demonstrated?
 
A: The ADS-B concept was tested and demonstrated in Alaska’s Capstone Program, where mountainous terrain prohibited radar surveillance. The program was very successful and yielded significant efficiency and safety benefits for Alaska airplane operators by enabling pilots to see and avoid other aircraft.
 
Q: Is ADS-B currently in use?
 
A: UPS Airlines is leveraging the benefits of ADS-B at its Louisville, KY hub. In addition, other applications of ADS-B are used to various degrees in Canada (Hudson Bay), Australia, Sweden, New Zealand, Mongolia and Taiwan.   
 
Q: Where else can we expect to see ADS-B used?
 
A: One of the first U.S. deployments of ADS-B will be in the Gulf of Mexico. Since radar isn’t practical for oceanic coverage, radar coverage in the Gulf today is limited to coastal areas. ADS-B equipment can be installed on oil platforms, providing gulfwide coverage and enabling aircraft spacing to be reduced from its current limit of 30 miles to just five miles. Other early applications of ADS-B will be in mountainous regions such as Colorado, where radar surveillance can be blocked by terrain, and in other test sites in Florida and Philadelphia. In October of 2007, the FAA issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that would require aircraft to have ADS-B transponders onboard by 2020. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has contracted with a consortium to install a nationwide system of ADS-B ground stations.
 
Q: What has the ADS-B ARC accomplished?
 
A: In October 2007, an ADS-B Aviation Rulemaking Committee (ARC) issued a report on optimizing the benefits of ADS-B. The ADS-B ARC then spent nine months evaluating the more than 1,400 public comments submitted in response to the ADS-B proposed rule. In September of 2008, the ADS-B ARC published a report that includes a set of recommendations for FAA intended to help resolve programmatic and technical issues and enable them to create a rule that yields benefits for all who operate in the nation’s airspace. A copy of this report is available online.
 
Q: Does the industry expect to meet the FAA proposed mandate to equip new aircraft by 2020?
 
A: Yes, and in fact the ADS-B ARC report identifies incentives that would encourage carriers to equip their fleets ahead of the proposed 2020 mandate.
 
Q: What issues still need to be addressed?
 
A: A number of technical challenges remain, such as international harmonization and interoperability, as well as frequency congestion and volume mitigation strategies.
 
Q: How much will this cost?
 
A: The FAA has published its own estimate of more than $1billion for a complete ground network system. Eventually, the FAA may recoup this investment by retiring unnecessary radar sites.
 
Airplane equipage costs for the airlines vary significantly depending on the age and configuration of the aircraft in their fleet. A4A estimates that the equipment will cost its member airlines – who currently operate 4,425 jet transports – more than $700 million to modify existing aircraft.
 
Q: How much money will ADS-B save?
 
A: As UPS Airlines’ success at its Louisville facility has demonstrated, there is potential for significant cost savings to airlines with respect to fuel savings and reduced delays. More systemwide savings could eventually be realized as conventional radar systems  could be rendered unnecessary, and be eliminated. Eventually, aircraft collision- avoidance systems would also be candidates for elimination as they could also be incorporated into  ADS-B technology. FAA estimated potential benefits at about $2.7 billion in 2007 dollars.
 
A4A strongly supports ADS-B technology, and an accelerated transition to NextGen. A4A consistently has expressed the view that ADS-B is a foundational technology for Next Gen. However, A4A is concerned that the ADS-B NPRM, if implemented as proposed, will not produce tangible benefits to airlines, (and by extension to the traveling and shipping public) but will, on the other hand, commit the aviation industry to enormous costs. 
 
Q: Does A4A support ADS-B?
 
A: Yes, ADS-B is a critical component of the Next Generation National Airspace System (NextGen), which is strongly supported by A4A and its member airlines in order for the system to safely accommodate anticipated growth in air traffic. A4A believes that Congress and the FAA should make this program a priority.  A4A is co-chair of the ADS-B Aviation Rulemaking Committee (ARC), and is working closely with the FAA and other industry stakeholders to refine an implementation strategy and provide practical recommendations to the FAA.


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