Alaska Airlines News
Alaska Airlines Implements New Ground Air Units, Retrofits 737s With Winglets to Conserve Fuel and Reduce Emissions
Since 2002, these efforts have reduced the amount of fuel Alaska Airlines uses to transport one passenger one mile by 17 percent. The accompanying reduction in carbon dioxide emissions is equivalent to taking 130,000 cars off the road for one year.
The diesel-powered preconditioned air units, along with ground-based electrical power, replace the use of an aircraft's onboard auxiliary power unit (APU), which runs on jet fuel. The ground-based units burn about 10 times less fuel than APUs, meaning the new units will significantly reduce costs and benefit the environment by lowering carbon emissions.
At Sea-Tac Airport, the use of preconditioned air units at 19 gates is expected to conserve more than 1.1 million gallons of fuel per year, saving the company
Annual savings will more than double to 2.4 million gallons of fuel and
Alaska Airlines had been moving toward using ground-based air units for about two years. The units make even better economic sense with oil prices hovering around
The airline has purchased or leased 33 mobile air units for the five hub airports. Even with the initial cost of
Earlier this month, Alaska Airlines also completed retrofitting all its existing 737s capable of using blended winglets. All new aircraft are delivered with blended winglets.
Winglets improve an aircraft's fuel efficiency and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by about 3 percent — or some 100,000 gallons a year per aircraft. The winglets are manufactured by
"The gold standard in winglets, our technology has saved the industry and the world community more than 1 billion gallons of fuel to date with projected additional fuel savings of more than 175 million gallons in 2008," said
Alaska Airlines has undertaken several other fuel-saving initiatives in the past year. Among them:
— Speeding up retirement of its MD-80s to fly only fuel-efficient 737s. The airline's remaining seven MD-80s will be taken out of service
— Using only one engine when taxiing jets for maintenance to conserve fuel.
— Employing more satellite-based navigation. Since 1996, Alaska Airlines has pioneered a technology called Required Navigation Performance. RNP enables aircraft to fly more direct routes with pinpoint accuracy and reduce diversions due to weather by using onboard navigation technology and the Global Positioning System satellite network. The airline uses RNP at remote and geographically challenging airports throughout the state of
— Using lighter-weight catering carts. Since retrofitting all of its aircraft with lighter-weight carts in
Alaska Airlines and Horizon Air together serve 94 cities through an expansive network in
SOURCE Alaska Airlines
Search Our News Using Google Search
Can't find what you want? Try using Google:



