ebook img

Economics of air transportation : proceedings of the 7th World Airports Conference PDF

135 Pages·1984·23.72 MB·English
by  coll.
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Economics of air transportation : proceedings of the 7th World Airports Conference

Economics of air transportation E c o n o m i cs of air t r a n s p o r t a t i on Proceedings of the 7th World Airports Conference organized by the Institution of Civil Engineers and held in London on 24-26 May 1983 Thomas Telford Ltd, London Published for the Institution of Civil Engineers by Thomas Telford Ltd, PO Box 101, 26-34 Old Street, London EC1 P 1JH First published 1984 Organizing Committee: G. M. Crook (Chairman), D. Allford, P. W. Brooks, B. F. I. Goddard, M. G. Hudson, Professor N. Lichfield, J. Mulkern British Library Cataloguing in Publication data Economics of air transport. 1. Aeronautics, Commercial I. Institution of Civil Engineers 387.7*1 HE9782 ISBN 0 7277 0191 6 © Institution of Civil Engineers, 1983, 1984, unless otherwise stated All rights, including translation, reserved. Except for fair copying, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the copyright owner. Requests should be directed to the Publications Manager at the above address. The Institution of Civil Engineers as a body does not accept responsibility for the statements made or for the opinions expressed in the following pages. Printed by The Thetford Press Limited, Thetford, Norfolk Contents Opening address. W. M. KNIGHTON 1 Keynote address. K. hammarskjOld 3 Response to Keynote address. J. DENT 7 AIRPORT DEVELOPMENTS 1. The development of a new airport, Changi, Singapore. LIM HOCK SAN 9 2. O'Hare 2000: the development programme for Chicago—O'Hare International Airport. M. SULOWAY and J. M. STEVENSON 15 Discussion on Papers 1 and 2 23 DEREGULATION 3. Airline deregulation: the US domestic experience. D. McKINNON 25 4. Theory of deregulation: the European view. H. RABEN 31 Discussion on Papers 3 and 4 41 FINANCING 5. Airport financing in today's United States economy. P. w. PELOQUIN 43 6. Key factors in aircraft financing. T. A. GREEN 47 AIRPORTS New concepts in airport planning and design. D. W. TURNER 53 Workshop session on new concepts in airport planning and design. Reporter: R. LAL 61 Airports and environmental compatibility. J. E. WESLER 63 Workshop session on environmental issues. Reporter: D. R. A. STAPEL 69 Accident survival—the airport and the aircraft. B. V. HEWES 71 Workshop session on safety and fire aspects at airports. Reporter: D. N. DRING 77 AIRLINES Route economics—accuracy versus meaningfulness. E. C. SPRY 79 Workshop session on route economics. Reporter: S. WHEATCROFT 81 Simplifying flying—development of shuttle operations. R. WATTS 83 Workshop session on simplifying flying—development of shuttle operations. Reporter: N. A. ROYCE 89 Commuting by fixed wing or helicopter? A. STEPHEN 91 Workshop session on commuting by fixed wing or helicopter? Reporter: B. BOTTING 95 AIRCRAFT US airport development in the 1980's. W. F. SHEA 97 Workshop session on air traffic management. Reporter: P. HEMMINGS 105 Future trends in transport aircraft. D. G. BROWN 107 Workshop session on future trends in transport aircraft. Reporter: C. W. CARPENTER 117 Propulsion of future aircraft. J. F. COPLIN and H. W. BENNETT 119 Workshop session on propulsion of future aircraft. Reporter: R. S. COLLADAY 125 Closing address. SIR PETER MASEFIELD 127 Opening address W. M. Knighton, Department of Transport Since this Conference last met, the world has is already under way, and the new terminal will passed through a recession whose severity has ultimately provide capacity at Gatwick to handle been unmatched since the depression of the up to 25 million passengers a year, twice the 1930s. The steady growth in trade and general present volume of traffic. economic activity to which we all became so However, improvements are not only taking accustomed in the post-war era came shuddering place at the London airports. There is now to a halt. It would have been amazing if the hardly an airport in the UK which has not had a air transport industry had escaped unscathed. major improvement scheme authorized in the past Sadly, there have been casualties and some few years. At Manchester, there is a virtually famous names have disappeared. The state-owned continuous programme of improvements to the carriers in many countries have also felt the terminal and cargo facilities, and 1982 saw the economic recession and have had to cut back completion of a major extension of the runway so their operations and staff. To an industry that the airport can now handle any aircraft geared up to meet large annual increases in wishing to fly to virtually any destination. At demand, even a cessation of growth can require a Birmingham airport a major new terminal is now painful process of adjustment. However, we well under construction and should be completed should now be looking ahead again and should in 1984, while at Luton, Newcastle, Leeds- focus on the formidable challenges before us. Bradford, Belfast anl Midlands, additional The airports industry is in a much better terminal and runway capacity is being, or has position now to cope with a fresh upturn in been, provided. demand for air travel than it was during earlier In the past four years about £450 million has periods. I can speak with knowledge only of the been spent on a wide range of projects designed UK, but I feel that our experience may not be to enable UK airports to meet the forecast untypical of other countries. In the UK, growth in demand. This represents both the advantage has been taken of the recent pause in largest capital expenditure programme of its growth in demand, both to rectify the kind since the Second World War and a token of bottlenecks which had appeared at a number of the British Government's confidence in the long- our airports during the late 1970s, and to plan term health of the air transport industry. and construct the additional capacity required Terminal capacity, under construction or to meet the forecast increase in traffic for the planned, will be able to meet any foreseeable rest of the 1980s. level of demand for the rest of the 1980s. It At Heathrow airport a fourth terminal is being is a reflection of the long-term nature of constructed on the south side. When completed airports planning that the problem which is now in 1985, this project will enable Heathrow to generating some controversy in the UK is how to handle a further 8 million passengers each year. develop and meet the growth in passenger demand The terminal has been designed to cope with the in the 1990s and beyond, and whether, in the largest wide-bodied aircraft now on the drawing London area, this will require major development board, and will be connected directly to the of the third London airport at Stansted. London Underground system by an extension of the If there have been significant improvements in Piccadilly line, which is now under construction the physical capacity of our airports to cope from the central terminal area. Terminal 4 will with demand, there have also been major advances ensure that Heathrow remains Europe's premier in reducing the impact their operation has on airport for the foreseeable future. surrounding communities. A combinaton of the At Gatwick, now the world's fourth busiest recent slowdown in traffic, and the steady international airport - a figure which is not replacement of older and noisier aircraft by generally kaovn - a major new terminal satellite their modern noise-certificated equivalents, has was opened in April 1983 and work is now under led to a distinct improvement in the noise way to improve the direct rail link between the climate around major airports, which is not to airport and Victoria station in London, and also imply complacency about the present position. to complete the M25 motorway connection to The burden of aircraft noise on many residential Heathrow and Stansted by the mid 1980s. Looking areas is still unwelcome and the industry must further ahead, planning permission was granted continue to take a full share of its at the end of 1982 for the erection of a second responsibility for further ameliorating the terminal to meet the anticipated demand well noise climate around major airports. into the 1990s. Preliminary construction work Nevertheless, JS the various deadlines for Economics of air transportation. Thomas Telford Ltd, London, 1984 1 OPENING ADDRESS banning non-noise-certificated aircraft come capacity utilization by feeding passengers into closer, we can anticipate a further significant their hub airports. improvement in the noise levels experienced by What is now becoming increasingly clear is those living close to airports. that modern fuel-efficient narrow-bodied and The issues of physical capacity of airports commuter aircraft can enable smaller and often and environmental impact continue to be more efficient new carriers to operate important and difficult questions, which have profitably on routes hitherto regarded as not been fully and properly resolved; but there uneconomic by the established airlines. In the are further developments which create new UK, even during the recession, we have seen a problems for airports, just as challenging as mushrooming of new operators, using the modern those posed by the introduction of the modern generation of small aircraft, who are competing jet and then of the Boeing 747 and other wide- very effectively on second and third level bodied aircraft. There is an urgent need for routes. When these carriers are allowed to fresh thinking about several aspects of airport compete directly with the established airlines, operation which have received relatively little as, for example, on our major domestic trunk public attention, at least in the UK. routes, the result is often a marked increase in the frequency of flights offered to the First, there is the problem of allocating passenger and a diminution in the average demand at airports as capacity becomes passenger load per aircraft. increasingly scarce. Many airports around the world will have to face up to this once demand In the past twelve months, for example, at the picks up. In the UK already we have to cope British Airport Authority's London area with the problem of excess demand both for airports, while passenger numbers have increased runway slots and terminal capacity during peak by only 1.3%, total air transport movements have periods at Heathrow and Gatwick. Looking ahead, increased by 4%. When this trend is coupled this is likely to become more than a peaking with the continued growth in demand for runway problem as the limit on air transport movements, capacity from small business jets, this marks a imposed on environmental grounds, comes into significant reversal of the previous trend force at Heathrow, and as the runway capacity at towards an ever-higher average number of Gatwick is reached. passengers per aircraft movement. It may mean a The experience of the USA at its congested return to worrying about the physical airports has highlighted some of the questions constraints on aircraft movements, rather than that will need to be considered. What are the just our ability to handle the passengers once most appropriate mechanisms for allocating they are inside the terminals; and that given limited runway capacity? Are so-called the physical constraints on runway capacity at 'grandfather rights' for airlines already our hub airports, we must consider mechanisms operating compatible with a pro-competitive air for ensuring a fairer allocation of these scarce transport market, in which new airline services resources, particularly during peak periods. should have a fair opportunity to compete? How Finally, we need to think more deeply about should scarce check-in and other passenger the nature of an airport as a business facilities be fairly allocated to new airlines? enterprise in its own right. More and more The extent and speed with which this becomes a countries are treating their airports as problem in other countries is likely to depend commercial entities which should seek financial on a number of factors, including the rate of independence from the state and provide services growth of demand, and in some countries perhaps and facilities in the most businesslike fashion also regulatory decisions. Within the UK there possible. The British government does not have been a number of voices raised in favour of directly own a single airport; and, as is well greater competition between airlines and the known, not only are there no financial subsidies need for less regulation and protection for from the taxpayer, but also airports owned by individual carriers. Similar voices have been public sector agencies are expected to earn a raised in international discussions. Any profit on the assets they employ. That has not further moves towards a less tightly reguLated always been a popular objective, but it reflects market will have implications for our airports. the view that in the long-term interests of air' transport as a whole, airports, like all other The second challenge flows from the radical parts of the industry, should earn their own way changes in aircraft technology which are now in the world without subsidies. What is taking effect. For much of the 1970s, a common beginning to become a matter of political assumption among governments and airport discussion in the UK, however, is whether planners was that growth in passenger demand airports should be placed outside the public would largely be met by the introduction of sector and operated by private sector commercial ever-larger aircraft which offered much lower organizations. costs per seat-mile. This placed a burden on airport terminal facilities, but markedly eased Those of us involved in civil aviation are the pressure which air traffic control working,in a field of rapid change. Change authorities and runways had experienced in the requires flexibility, innovation, and a late 1960s. This trend was encouraged by the realization that we always have something to protection against competition given to the learn. Conferences such as this serve an established carriers by the system of tight essential role in facilitating the exchange of regulation which existed o>; r..-»s* major routes, information ajl views, which is so vital if we and which enabled them to maximize their are all successfully to face and anticipate the challenges of the future. 2 Keynote address K. Hammarskjold, Director-General, International Air Transport Association At the previous World Airports Conference I The airlines, strapped as they are for cash, spoke on the subject of 'Airlines and airports: have to pay for the facilities provided by the co-operation for survival,' and the theme is other components of the industry in the form of even more relevant now. The best forecasts fees at airports and en route navigation charges available in 1979 have proved far too - components which more often than not are in optimistic. Worldwide economic recession has the monopoly - even government monopoly bitten deeper and lasted longer than was position; and where consequently there is mostly foreseen in 1979, and the effects of oil price none of the quality and price competition so increases have been more dramatic than expected, warmly recommended to and offered by the although the trend is currently reversing. It airlines; inevitably these costs are reflected remains to be seen how much of the current in the price of an airline ticket. So everyone reduction in crude oil prices will be passed on involved in civil air transport must join the to the airlines. Because the price of jet fuel belt-tightening, cut back hard on all but is posted in US dollars, fluctuating exchange absolutely essential developments, and reduce rates can still result in high fuel prices in capital and operating costs to the absolute many countries. minimum consistent with safety and functional The year 1979 was the last in which IATA efficiency. This is (or at least should be) a international scheduled services collectiveLy we-together situation, not them-and-us. showed a positive operating result - albeit a Against this background there is continuing small one - which turned into an overall loss of pressure for cheaper air fares, particularly in US$350 million after interest payments. Since Europe, where costs are the highest in the then, the results have taken a steep nose-dive. world. In 1981, for example, operating costs For 1980, 1981 and 1982, IATA international for routes within Europe were more than double scheduled services collectively showed a loss of the average before-interest payments for all more than $5000 million. Some airlines have IATA route areas. But in spite of the steep managed to pull put of the red by strenuous costs in Europe, airlines have introduced an effort, and others are just about breaking even, increasingly wide range of attractive low fares, but none are really making an adequate return on and we should not forget that more than half of capital when the need for re-equipment is taken all intra-European air traffic is on back-to- into account, and the debt-to-equity ratio is back programmed charters at extremely low reaching alarming proportions. It is a sobering prices, the equivalent of which does not exist thought that of 1982's loss on international in the USA. This European de facto scheduled services of $1700 million, $1600 million low-price traffic is always happily forgotten by represented interest payments. those who want to make disadvantageous This emphasizes the urgent need for all comparisons between US and European air travel components of the air transport industry - prices. The problem is that fares must be cost- airlines, airport operators, air traffic based for airlines to be financially viable, but authorities and manufacturers - to work in close at the same time the prices must not be pitched co-operation, and above all to display an acute at a level that discourages people from flying. awareness of the fundamental requirement for This calls for stark realism, for facing facts extremely careful cost-evaluation of all capital as they are and not for wishful thinking based expenditure. on incorrect or misleading comparisons with the USA. Airlines worldwide have undertaken major surgery to cut costs - including massive staff The Union Bank of Switzerland recently reductions, salary cuts and freezes and the sale published an in-depth study of prices and of assets. At the same time they have revised earnings in 47 major cities worldwide during the their estimates of future growth. It is first half of 1982. It clearly demonstrates unlikely that the industry will return to the that purchasing power is higher in the USA. All boom years of the 1960s and late 1970s, and it four US cities surveyed were in the top seven. is a sobering thought that even during the The survey says, 'Wage earners in San Francisco 1970s, when the IATA airlines experienced an and Los Angeles are able to purchase more with average traffic growth of 8.5%/year, the average their incomes than anywhere else in the 47 profitability rate was a mere 2.7% - not exactly cities surveyed.' In other words, you get more a handsome return compared with many other for your money in the USA where wage and salary industries. levels are in the top bracket, but the price Economics of air transportation. Thomas Telford Ltd, London, 1984 KEYNOTE ADDRESS levels for many goods and services are lower or as being 'too high' compared with the USA. By no higher than in some European cities. This the same token, then so are: food prices in six basic fact must be borne in mind when drawing surveyed major European cities; a 'six-pack' of comparisons between US and European air fares. electrical household appliances in ten surveyed The four selected cities in the USA were San European cities; car prices throughout Europe; a Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago and New York. A package of goods and services in twelve surveyed representative cross-section of 19 European European cities; and public trim*port in nine cities comprised Amsterdam, Athens, Brussels, surveyed European cities. So differences Copenhagen, Dublin, Dusseldorf, Geneva, between European and US air fares are part of a Helsinki, Istanbul, Lisbon, London, Luxembourg, general economic pattern. Madrid, Milan, Oslo, Paris, Stockholm, Vienna One of the reasons for high airline operating and Zurich. costs in Europe is that air traffic control Taking a closer look at wage and salary costs twice as much as in the USA - largely levels, San Francisco and Chicago were equal in because of the lack of a single air traffic flow second place in the worldwide 'league table', management system and the proliferation of Los Angeles was fifth and New York fourth; but European control centres. In 1981 fees for food prices in San Francisco, for example, were government-provided services in Europe, lower than in Helsinki, Geneva, Zurich, Oslo, including airport and air navigation charges, Copenhagen and Stockholm. were 460% higher than in the USA. Similarly, Los Angeles was fifth in the In this connection a recent positive worldwide earnings league - but sixteenth in development has been the signing of a memorandum price levels (including rents) which are as high of understanding between the USA and Britain, or higher in five European cities, including ending a long-standing dispute about user London. charges at Heathrow airport. The outcome is The corollary is that general purchasing power that Britain has recognized the need for the is lower in Europe than in the USA because British Airports Authority to seek external European wages and salaries are much lower but financing for capital investments instead of at the same time prices are relatively higher. recovering all costs before starting capital This applies to a wide range of goods and projects, with the airlines as the main source services. Again this factor must be taken into of income. Charges to the airlines will reflect account in relation to air fares. more closely the cost of supplying airport A few specific examples of price differentials services and all traffic will pay its are : proportionate share of the operating costs - a Food prices. 'Shopping basket' of 39 food very welcome step. items in large supermarkets, including sales A further factor in European costs is taxes where applicable, cost more in five major circuitous air routes which on average (and that European centres than in Chicago and New York, is not new) are 15% longer than the distance 'as and was higher in six European cities compared the crow flies'. This compares with only 3% in with Los Angeles and San Francisco. the USA. Household electrical appliances. This was The reasons for the inefficient European based on a 'six-pack' comprising: an electric routes are usually political or military. The or gas range, a refrigerator, a sewing machine, outcome is longer flying times and increased a colour television set, a vacuum cleaner, and a fuel burn, resulting in higher costs. It is steam iron. This cost less in New York than in estimated that if only the ten most extreme nine major European cities, and the same as in cases were rectified, the fuel saving alone Madrid. would amount annually to $27 million. Public transport (i.e. bus, tram, underground Taking one example of a zigzag route, the railway) . Compared with San Francisco - second distance flown from Stockholm to Athens is 1446 worldwide in wage/salary levels - prices for nautical miles. By straightening out this could public transport are more expensive in nine of be reduced to 1303 nautical miles, a saving of the surveyed European cities. 143 nautical miles or just over 10% with a Car prices. The Union Bank of Switzerland consequent reduction in costs. survey says categorically, 'the best place to However, considerable progress is being made. buy a car is North America, where the average During a recent series of meetings of a special comes to only 7984 US dollars - and for a 'big task force of the ICAO European Air Navigation American land cruiser' at that. In Europe an Planning Group, the majority of IATA's proposals automobile averages a good 8700 US dollars'. for route realignments were accepted. These Services. A weighted package of 28 goods and total 9.6% of the existing mileage'on the route services - including hairdressing, dry cleaning, sectors concerned, which is a significant saving cinema ticket, paperback book, roll of colour in terms of fuel burn. Also a number of new film, postage, use of telephone, travelling routeings were agreed which will further add to expenses, etc., cost US$261 as an average of the miles-savings. 47 countries surveyed. At the working group level the representatives The four most expensive cities - Oslo, of the various states were most co-operative, Helsinki, London and Geneva - were all in and it is to be hoped that the European Air Europe, where the average price of this basket Navigation Planning Group endorses the route was US$281. Compared with San Francisco, the realignments, and that all the European states package is more expensive in most of the involved will implement them without delay. European cities in the survey. Here there is a real challenge for European These examples illustrate that it is invidious politicians. When these original routes were and misleading to single out European air fares created, they were dictated by the fact that 4

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.