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Environment

 

Sustainable Airport EnvironmentBanning single-use plastics, encouraging use of public transport to and from an airport, managing food waste, reducing use of fossil fuels, monitoring water use, switching to renewable energy sources, sourcing food sustainably. These are all examples of how an airport can begin to reduce its carbon footprint; its greenhouse-gas emissions; its impact on the environment.

The climate change emergency is upon us, and all industries must work hard at becoming more sustainable – the aviation industry included. As the above paragraph demonstrates, this goes beyond using sustainable aviation fuel.

Many airports and authorities have recognised the need to implement environmentally-friendly strategies, and International Airport Review here showcases some of these achievements. However the entire industry must continue striving and innovating to ensure an airport’s surroundings are not negatively impacted and the environment is protected for the future.

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Improving airport capacity management with OR-MASTER

28 July 2015 | By Konstantinos G Zografos, Professor at Lancaster University Management School

Airport capacity is a challenge that is only going to grow as passenger numbers accelerate, but as well as investment in infrastructure, could utilisation of airport capacity be significantly improved to ease the pressure? Konstantinos G Zografos, Professor at Lancaster University Management School, describes how its £2.8 million OR-MASTER research…

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Busiest day of the year for UK air traffic control

24 July 2015 | By Katie Sadler, Digital Content Producer, International Airport Review

The 24th July is expected to be the busiest day of the year for UK air traffic control according to air navigation services provider NATS.

news

UK air traffic continues upward trend

23 July 2015 | By Katie Sadler, Digital Content Producer, International Airport Review

NATS, the UK air navigation services specialist, has released figures suggesting a continuous upward trend in UK air traffic for eight consecutive months.