Neus Escobar
Researcher at BC3 (Basque Center for Climate Change).
The study is highly relevant and presents high quality and scientific innovation. It is the first study to use the ADS-B Exchange database to identify the number of flights, type of aircraft and route to calculate the emissions associated with private aviation in 2019-2023. In doing so, it goes so far as to calculate emissions from events such as the Super Bowl, the COP, the FIFA World Cup or the Cannes Film Festival, and the seasonality in emissions associated with tourist destinations such as Ibiza. It reveals the growing trend in emissions from private aviation and the countries where most of these flights are registered, with the United States and Europe leading the way. Specifically, the United States accounts for almost 70 % of the private flights registered in the period. It highlights the high intensity of emissions per hour on relatively shorter flights.
The article points to an increasing trend in the number of flights and CO2 emissions associated with private aviation, as has been observed for commercial aviation, and the same rebound effect after the pandemic. This study reveals the contribution that private aviation makes to global greenhouse gas emissions and complements other studies that show the asymmetry in emissions associated with commercial aviation, where frequent flyers with higher incomes produce most of the emissions. In this sense, the study provides transparency in the spatial patterns and emissions of private aviation, a sector that had gone largely unnoticed until now but in which wealthy people are responsible for the totality of emissions, with a high per capita intensity.
The results thus point to the need to regulate this sector to mitigate climate change. And by revealing the countries with the highest density of private flights, it gives us an indication of which governments should take measures to limit the associated emissions, potentially including the computation of these emissions in their inventories.As with international aviation, which is not included in the Paris Agreement, the results also show the need for multilateral measures to regulate the sector, such as those taken by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) in the context of the CORSIA scheme, which includes private aviation operators but is still voluntary until 2027.
Overall, the method developed is the most comprehensive to date when it comes to accounting for CO2 emissions from private aviation. But due to data issues, it does not cover all flights and time spent in cab mode, so emissions should be higher than estimated.