Flights are taking huge 'detours' around Russian air space. Here's what that means for the climate crisis
Since Russia closed its airspace to airlines from dozens of countries at the end of February
-- in response to sanctions levied for its invasion of Ukraine -- about 400
flights per month that had previously been routed over the country are being
forced to take a wider berth, according to Flightradar24.
In lieu of using Russian airspace, some
flights from Europe to Asia are flying south of the country or, in some cases,
taking a painfully long reroute over the Arctic. And Russia is huge; it's the
largest country on the planet -- larger than the continent of Antarctica.
The new routes are leading to more time in
the air for passengers and crew, more miles flown and more fuel burned -- which
means more planet-warming emissions.
Japan Airlines Flight JL43 from
Tokyo to London, for instance, uses a Boeing 777-300ER aircraft that burns
roughly 2,300 gallons of fuel per hour. The rerouted JL43 flight -- which now
heads east over the North Pacific, Alaska, Canada and Greenland -- added 2.4
hours of flight time and likely burned around 5,600 gallons more fuel, a 20%
increase.
That means Flight JL43 could be emitting an
additional 54,000 kilograms, or 60 tons, of planet-warming carbon dioxide into
the atmosphere, according to calculations by Paul Williams, an atmospheric
scientist at the University of Reading, for CNN. That's the same amount of
carbon dioxide as the average car driving 137,000 miles, or nearly six times
around the planet.
Williams said the exact fuel burn rate
depends on the weight of the aircraft, the altitude and airspeed, and some of
those variables are unknown. These calculations also do not factor in the
warming effect of other greenhouse gas emissions or the flights' condensation
trails.
"Naturally, a lot of people when
thinking about aviation and climate, they focus on the CO2 emitted,"
Williams told CNN. "But, actually, it's much worse than that. CO2 is
actually just the tip of the iceberg. The extra flight time is causing a lot
more warming than the mileages I gave you because they only take into account
the CO2, not the other non-CO2 effects."
Dan Rutherford, director of the International
Council on Clean Transportation's aviation and marine programs, told CNN that
Williams' calculations "look reasonable."
"If anything, he is underestimating the
likely impact because, at the margin, long-haul flights become even more fuel
intensive with extra distance because they 'burn fuel to carry fuel,' in industry
parlance," Rutherford said.
In other words, it's a vicious, fuel-guzzling
loop: It takes more fuel to carry the weight of more fuel.
According to Flightradar24, the
aircraft tracking service, there are a limited number of flights -- mostly
Finnair flights -- taking the polar route around Russia. Others are taking a
southern route.
Lufthansa Flight LH716 from
Frankfurt to Tokyo, for example, has added nearly an hour to its flight time.
The Airbus A340 aircraft typically burns around 2,000 gallons of fuel an hour,
which could mean the extra flight time burned another 1,428 gallons of fuel.
That's an additional 13,710 kilograms of
planet-warming emissions -- the same amount released by an average car driving
34,000 miles, or nearly twice around the world.
Rutherford estimated that if Russian airspace
remains closed for much longer, the global aviation carbon inventory may
increase by up to 1%.
That seems very low, but air travel is a
significant contributor to the climate crisis, accounting for more than 2% of
the world's carbon dioxide emissions as of 2018, according to the Environmental and Energy Study Institute. The institute notes
that if the aviation industry were its own country, it would rank No. 6 in
carbon emissions.
"[However], I consider that a marginal
impact that governments shouldn't consider when setting policy regarding the
Ukrainian invasion," Rutherford told CNN. "It's a small price to pay
to defend global democracy and the international rule of law, in my personal
opinion."
Flying can make up a huge portion of a person's carbon footprint. For instance, a
one-way intercontinental flight between Hong Kong and San Francisco emits more
carbon dioxide than the average British person's activities -- or that of 10
people living in Ghana -- over the course of a year, according to a 2020 analysis published in the journal Nature. "Fly
less" is often the first line of expert advice for people looking to reduce their climate impact.
But with the aviation industry struggling to decarbonize, Williams said he expects emissions
from aviation to only increase over time.
"Aviation is finding it really difficult
to decarbonize than the rest of the economy," he said. "Because the
plane needs so much energy to generate the thrust, it's really problematic to
move away from fossil fuels. So aviation is a small part of the jigsaw
currently, but in the coming decades, it will grow as a fraction of global
emissions."
But right now, the extra emissions are
unavoidable, Williams said. There are no other options than taking the long way
around Russia.
Airlines can invest in new, more efficient
aircrafts and shift to sustainable aviation fuels, Rutherford said, but those
are long-term solutions. Short-term strategies are limited.
"The extra fuel use and emissions, and
also extra fuel cost due to higher oil prices generally, are basically
inescapable for airlines," Rutherford said. "In addition to paying
more, they can reduce payload -- passengers or carriage -- at the cost of some
revenue, or they can cancel the flight."
In February, UN Secretary-General António
Guterres said that the "current events" showed the world was too
reliant on fossil fuels, calling them "a dead end." A recent UN climate report shows that unless Earth's
warming is dramatically slowed, billions of people and other species may
no longer be able to adapt to irreversible changes brought by fossil fuel
emissions.
Rutherford said he expects "renewed
interest in developing alternative fuels in shipping and aviation, to distance
those industries from Russian energy exports."
"This particular war is causing a wide
rethink about getting off of fossil fuels," he said.
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