Title: GRA, Incorporated
12nd Annual NEXTOR GMU FAA Workshop Innovations
in NAS-Wide Simulation In Support of NextGen
Benefits Analysis
Advances in Monetization of Benefits January
28, 2010
GRA, Incorporated David Ballard, Senior
Economist 115 West Avenue Jenkintown, PA 19046
USA bdballard_at_gra-inc.com 215 884 7500
2Overview
- Acknowledgement of IPSA Team Members and Team
Environment - NextGen Performance Improvements
- ATM Improvements and Changes in Use of System
- ATM as One of Many Inputs for System Users and
Decision-Making - Benefits as User Harvesting of Performance
Improvements under Specific Scenarios - Advances in Benefits Monetization
- Environmental Implications of Aviation Growth and
NextGen Capabilities - Benefits for High Performance GA Users
- Assessing Benefits for Travelers and the Broader
Economy - Airlines and NextGen Beneficiaries or
Intermediaries? - Partners in either case
- Whats Next?
3IPSA Team Leadership and Members
4NextGen provides numerous NAS performance
improvements
1
3
Through High Density Operations, new runways, and
other operational improvements, airport
capacities increased 40 to 60, allowing
increased throughput while maintaining reasonable
Demand/Capacity ratios
4
Through Trajectory Based Operations, satellite
navigation, data communications, and other
operational improvements, en route capacities
increased 70 to 95
Future individual aircraft (airframes, engines)
and ATC exhibit 32 dB noise reduction
(cumulative) 33 reduction in fuel burn 60
reduction in emissions
X
NextGen
Baseline
2
Delays attributable to Weather reduced by over
40 through improved airport capacity in Weather,
improved aircraft capability in Weather, and
advances in probabilistic decision making
Noise Exposure NextGen
Noise Exposure Baseline
5Primary benefit opportunities for NextGen
performance are increased throughput and reduced
average delay
BaselineCapacity
NextGen Capacity
Average Delay
Capacity Increase Due to NextGen
Baseline Projected Delay/Throughput
Accommodate Growth
A
C
Reduce Delay
Increased Throughput Possible with Same Average
Delay as Baseline
D
B
Reduced Delay Possible with Unchanged Throughput
Number of Flights
Feasible Projected Throughput with NextGen
Feasible Projected Throughput, Baseline Future
without NextGen
- This analysis is predicated on the fundamental
capacity tradeoff between throughput (quantity of
service) and delay (quality of service) in the NAS
6What Must Operators Take into Account?
- Operator Costs and Inputs
- Fuel
- Labor
- Airport costs
- Ownership/overhead
- ATC Infrastructure and Operations
- Delay costs
- Market Features
- Demand
- Competitive environment
- Environmental constraints
- ANSP policies and rules of the road
7Depending on circumstances affecting other inputs
and parameters, NAS users will harvest the
NextGen capabilities in different ways
BaselineCapacity
NextGen Capacity
Average Delay
Capacity Increase Due to NextGen
Baseline Projected Delay/Throughput
Accommodate Growth
A
C
Reduce Delay
Increased Throughput Possible with Same Average
Delay as Baseline
B
Reduced Delay Possible with Unchanged Throughput
Number of Flights
Feasible Projected Throughput with NextGen
Feasible Projected Throughput, Baseline Future
without NextGen
- The response by airlines and other system users
to NextGen capabilities (opportunities for delay
savings and increased throughput) will determine
the ultimate levels of improved performance
8Valuing NextGen requires, in part, valuing
possible scenarios individually
BaselineCapacity
NextGen Capacity
Average Delay
Capacity Increase Due to NextGen
Baseline Projected Delay/Throughput
Accommodate Growth
A
C
Reduce Delay
Increased Throughput Possible with Same Average
Delay as Baseline
D
B
Operating Point Analyzed
Reduced Delay Possible with Unchanged Throughput
Number of Flights
Feasible Projected Throughput with NextGen
Feasible Projected Throughput, Baseline Future
without NextGen
- D, the operating point analyzed, arises from
modeling choices about parameter settings for the
simulation tools D is not directly chosen - Points shown (A through D) are simulation results
but the curves are notional actually tracing a
curve requires repeated simulation runs
9Note that some scenarios may rely on different
combinations or uses of NextGen components or
alternatives, giving rise to different capacities
BaselineCapacity
NextGen(s) Capacities
Average Delay
Capacity Increase(s) Due to NextGen(s)
Baseline Projected Delay/Throughput
Accommodate Growth
A
C
Reduce Delay
Increased Throughput Possible with Same Average
Delay as Baseline
B
Reduced Delay Possible with Unchanged Throughput
Number of Flights
Feasible Projected Throughput with NextGen
Feasible Projected Throughput, Baseline Future
without NextGen
- Examples of factors that might lead to different
capacity curves include greater use of secondary
airports, differing levels of avionics equipage
or capability, or differences in policy
environments or rules of the road
10Advances Environmental Implications
- Environmental implications of NextGen
improvements are complex, controversial, of
interest to many parties and depend on the future
policy treatment of environmental mitigation
across all sources - IPSA is treating aviation environmental impacts
through increasing collaboration and coordination
(through the JPDO Environmental Working Group)
with FAA AEE and its Aviation Environmental
Portfolio Management Tool (APMT), which is under
development by several universities and
contractors. - This coordination will involve use of a common
set of methodologies and parameters for measuring
and valuing the relevant inventories
11Advances HPGA Users
- Focus has been on
- Delay savings for these users based on simulated
flight trajectories with and without NextGen - Analysis of user activity at the airport level
has increased understanding of where HPGA
aircraft customarily operate, which affects where
and how NextGen equipage issues arise for these
users
12Advances Passenger Benefits
BaselineCapacity
NextGen Capacity
Average Delay
Capacity Increase Due to NextGen
Baseline Projected Delay/Throughput
Accommodate Growth
A
C
Reduce Delay
Increased Throughput Possible with Same Average
Delay as Baseline
D
B
Operating Point Analyzed
Reduced Delay Possible with Unchanged Throughput
Annual RPMs
Number of Flights
Feasible Projected Throughput with NextGen
Feasible Projected Throughput, Baseline Future
without NextGen
- Depending on operator choices about harvesting
NextGen capabilities, passengers may benefit from
an increased availability of flights with
unchanged average delay (service quality), at
point C, improved service quality (reduced delay)
on an unchanged level of seat availability at
point B, or from additional flights and improved
average delays, at an intermediate point like D,
the operating point analyzed shown above. - There are relatively straightforward ways to
value (from the passenger perspective) an outcome
at point C (increased consumer surplus due to
fares lower than they would be otherwise) or an
outcome at point B (reduced average delay valued
using the average value of passenger time), but
how can intermediate points be assessed?
13Advances Passenger Benefits
BaselineCapacity
NextGen Capacity
Average Delay
Capacity Increase Due to NextGen
Baseline Projected Delay/Throughput
Accommodate Growth
A
C
Reduce Delay
Increased Throughput Possible with Same Average
Delay as Baseline
D
B
Operating Point Analyzed
Reduced Delay Possible with Unchanged Throughput
Annual RPMs
Number of Flights
Feasible Projected Throughput with NextGen
Feasible Projected Throughput, Baseline Future
without NextGen
- Depending on operator choices about harvesting
NextGen capabilities, passengers may benefit from
an increased availability of flights with
unchanged average delay (service quality), at
point C, improved service quality (reduced delay)
on an unchanged level of seat availability at
point B, or from additional flights and improved
average delays, at an intermediate point like D,
the operating point analyzed shown above. - There are relatively straightforward ways to
value (from the passenger perspective) an outcome
at point C (increased consumer surplus due to
fares lower than they would be otherwise) or an
outcome at point B (reduced average delay valued
using the average value of passenger time), but
how can intermediate points be assessed?
14- Key
- a annual throughput, baseline feasible (Point
A) - a average delay, baseline infrastructure with
feasible throughput (Point A) - b average delay, NextGen infrastructure with
baseline throughput (Point B) - G annual throughput, NextGen infrastructure at
approximate level of average delay a (Point C) - x average delay associated with Point D
- Y annual throughput associated with Point D
- Valuation
- Using the reduction in average delay associated
with operating unchanged throughput through a
more capable NextGen system, using on the
passenger value of time (PVT), the value of time
savings at Point D is denoted VT Value(B) - Using the reduction in average real yield
associated with bringing increased throughput to
market, the value to passengers at Point C is the
aggregation of savings on RPMs sold at reduced
average real yield (the consumer surplus method),
denoted CS Value(C) - The value of capabilities and operational
outcomes leading to Point D is calculated as a
weighted sum of these two corner valuations - Value at interior points can also be calculated.
15Advances Benefits to the Broader Economy
- Not currently a part of IPSA approach
- Other researchers (Harback, et.al. from
Mitre-CAASD, Jeffrey Cohen from University of
Hartford) have looked at Computable General
Equilibrium (CGE) approaches to estimating the
impact on GDP of aviation or transportation
infrastructure investment. - This is not the same thing as economic impact
- Work is still preliminary for aviation concern
is that aviation is such a small sector within
entire economy
16Advances Implications/Benefits for Airlines
- NextGen enables operational improvements to
airline NAS users across a variety of metrics - Increased flight opportunities
- Reduced flight delays
- Reduced fuel requirements (more direct and
precise flight trajectories) - Lowers cost per flight
- Reduces environmental impacts
- Are airlines beneficiaries or just intermediaries
that transfer the capabilities (harvest)
enabled by NextGen investments to final users of
the NAS (passengers, shippers, broader
population)? - Given current and anticipated institutional
arrangements, the incentives of airlines and
other users to make necessary NextGen investments
their NextGen business case must be
understood and taken account of by policymakers
(e.g., RTCA TF5)
17Whats in Operators Big Picture?
- Operator Costs and Inputs
- Fuel
- Labor
- Airport costs
- Ownership/overhead
- ATC Infrastructure and Operations
- Delay costs
- Market Features
- Demand
- Competitive environment
- Environmental constraints
- ANSP policies and rules of the road
18Next Steps
- Stakeholder business cases
- Rationale and pace of equipage for specific users
- Active and ongoing engagement of stakeholders as
NextGen is designed and deployed - Scenarios within which NextGen is deployed
- Economic growth/input costs
- Environmental constraints
- Alternative far term formulations for NextGen
- Equipage requirements
- Variations in infrastructure deployment or use
19Thank You
NEXTOR Asilomar -- April 15, 2009
GRA, Incorporated