I'm not a great fan of air travel, but clearly other people do want to roam around the earth.
Up to now I had thought I preferred [if I have to use planes at all] travelling in the A380 compared to other planes - the A380 being a 4 engined wide body from Airbus.
However there are problems with loading/unloading those planes - as many airports can't really cope with the large number of passengers all arriving at the same time.
Airbus also have a 2 engined plane - the A350, which is slightly smaller, and seemingly almost as good from the passenger point of view as the A380
If we compare the fuel consumption per passenger mile though of different planes, we discover that currently the Boeing 787 Dreamliner has the best fuel consumption according to industry standard measures, and per passenger the fuel efficiency is significantly better than the A380 [the A380 is likely to burn up around 60% more fuel on flights compared to the 787].
However the Airbus A350 has fuel efficiency ratings which are only marginally worse than the 787 Dreamliner [order of 1%], but it may be a better plane from some passenger's points of view.
Unfortunately there is some evidence that enthusiasm for travel [which I don't fully share] is likely to kick in Jevon's paradox - see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jevons_paradox
So even though there has been considerable improvement in fuel consumption by aircraft over the last decade or two, the overall consumption and corresponding pollution and greenhouse gas emissions will have gone up.
Up to now I had thought I preferred [if I have to use planes at all] travelling in the A380 compared to other planes - the A380 being a 4 engined wide body from Airbus.
However there are problems with loading/unloading those planes - as many airports can't really cope with the large number of passengers all arriving at the same time.
Airbus also have a 2 engined plane - the A350, which is slightly smaller, and seemingly almost as good from the passenger point of view as the A380
If we compare the fuel consumption per passenger mile though of different planes, we discover that currently the Boeing 787 Dreamliner has the best fuel consumption according to industry standard measures, and per passenger the fuel efficiency is significantly better than the A380 [the A380 is likely to burn up around 60% more fuel on flights compared to the 787].
However the Airbus A350 has fuel efficiency ratings which are only marginally worse than the 787 Dreamliner [order of 1%], but it may be a better plane from some passenger's points of view.
Unfortunately there is some evidence that enthusiasm for travel [which I don't fully share] is likely to kick in Jevon's paradox - see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jevons_paradox
So even though there has been considerable improvement in fuel consumption by aircraft over the last decade or two, the overall consumption and corresponding pollution and greenhouse gas emissions will have gone up.
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