conference paper

Airline emission charges: Effects on airfares, service quality, and aircraft design

Proceedings of the international forum on shipping, ports and airports (IFSPA) 2009 - post-financial tsunami: The way forward for shipping, transport and international trade, hong kong, china

Publication Date

August 1, 2009

Author(s)

Jan Brueckner, Anming Zhang, Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Abstract

This paper investigates the effect of airline emissions charges on airline service quality, airfares, aircraft design features, and network structure, using a realistic and detailed theoretical model of competing duopoly airlines. These impacts are derived by analyzing the effects of an increase in the effective price of fuel, which is the path by which emissions charges will alter airline choices. The results show that emission charges will raise fares, reduce flight frequency, increase load factors, and raise aircraft fuel efficiency, while having no effect on aircraft size. Given that these adjustments occur in response to the treatment of an emissions externality that is currently unaddressed, they represent efficient changes that move society closer to a social optimum.

Suggested Citation
Jan K. Brueckner, Anming Zhang and Hong Kong Polytechnic University (2009) “Airline emission charges: Effects on airfares, service quality, and aircraft design”, in Proceedings of the international forum on shipping, ports and airports (IFSPA) 2009 - post-financial tsunami: The way forward for shipping, transport and international trade, hong kong, china, pp. pp 10–27.