1 / 19

A Transparent and Economically Efficient Process for Determining Planned Airport Capacities

A Transparent and Economically Efficient Process for Determining Planned Airport Capacities. Phil Railsback Center for Air Transportation Systems Research George Mason University. Why Determine Planned Capacities?. Delays Are a Function of Planned (Scheduled) Airport Capacity

Download Presentation

A Transparent and Economically Efficient Process for Determining Planned Airport Capacities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Transparent and Economically Efficient Process for Determining Planned Airport Capacities Phil Railsback Center for Air Transportation Systems Research George Mason University

  2. Why Determine Planned Capacities? • Delays Are a Function of Planned (Scheduled) Airport Capacity • Economic Cost of Reliability to • Passengers • Airlines • Recognizing Property Rights of Slots to Holders • Slots Can Be A Scarce Resource • Codification of Rights Helps Establish Value • Slots Being Claimed as Financial Assets

  3. Choosing a Planned Capacity • “Planned” v. “Scheduled” • Planned Capacity Must Include Scheduled Operations (Airlines) Unscheduled (“Pop-Up”) Airline Operations General Aviation Operations (US Part 135 and 91) • Unscheduled Operations Must be Taken Into Account in Policy and Planning

  4. Definitions • Time Period Slots Are Considered Fungible Within a Time Period • Airport State Open v. Closed, IMC v VMC, Runways in Use • Planned Capacity Policy-Established Upper Bound on Operations • Realized Capacity Actual Maximum Number of Operations Possible in a Specific Time Period on Day of Operations

  5. Definitions (continued) • Slot Availability Probability of a Planned Slot Being Realized on Day and Time of Operations • Slot Failure Event Where a Planned Slot is Not Realized • Priority Class Sub-grouping of Slots Within a Time Period to Support Multiple Slot Priorities

  6. Randomness and Capacity • Capacity is a Function of Random Processes • Weather • Inter-Arrival Rate Randomness • Departure-Arrival Interference • Fleet Mix Dependence (Wake Vortex) • Therefore Capacity is a Random Process • Capacity is Properly Described as a Probability Density Function (PDF)

  7. Airport State Identification • {Closed, IMC, VMC} X {Runway Configurations} e.g. IMC using 22/13 (Arrival/Departure) VMC using 13/13 etc. • Randomness Leads to a Capacity Distribution by State Can be Determined by Analysis or Empirical Measurement Inter-Arrival Randomness, Arrival-Departure Interference, Fleet Mix Variation • Each State Has a Probability of Occurring State Frequencies are Empirically Measurable

  8. Airport Capacity • Airport States Form a Partitioning • Each State Has a Capacity Distribution • Probability of a Realized Capacity (RC) is (by Law of Total Probability)

  9. Example: LGA • State-Specific Capacity PDFs • Based on Historical Data by State • Selected only Time Periods When Operating at Capacity • Shows Very Little Weather Dependence

  10. Planned Capacity and Slot Availability • There is a Relationship Between Planned Capacity and the Realized Capacity Distribution • The Relationship Results in • Slot Availability (%) • Expected Number of Unplanned Slots

  11. Derivation of Slot Availability • Partition By Possible Realized Capacities • Each Combination of Realized Capacity (RC) and Planned Capacity (PC): • RC >= PC, p is 1 • RC < PC, p is RC / PC • Slot Availability:

  12. Unplanned Slots • Reducing Planned Capacity Increases System Reliability at Cost of Reduced Utilization • U(PC): Expected Number of Unplanned Slots • e.g.: 9 Planned Slots, 12 Realized Slots • 3 Unplanned Slots – Opportunity Cost • The Expected Value is:

  13. Example: LGA

  14. Example: LGA

  15. Economic Efficiency • What is the Most Efficient Planned Capacity? • Maintain System Reliability v. Maximize Throughput • We Need Slot Valuation as a Function of Slot Availability • Then Maximize Summed Slot Valuation: • e.g.: 5 Slots at 98% valued at 900 € each • 10 Slots at 85% valued at 400 € each • 4500 € > 4000 € → Plan 5 Slots

  16. Auctions Can Provide Valuation • Auctions Provide Value Discovery Across Multiple Operators • We Can Integrate Desired Availability into a Slot Auction • Auction Availability/Priority Classes, or • Have Bidders Specify Desired Availability in Their Packages • Might be Prone to Auction Gaming • Necessary Condition for Operators’ Product Differentiation by On-Time Performance

  17. LGA Example: Priority 2 Slots • Compare: • 5 Priority 1 Slots, 98% Availability and (from previous plot) • 5 Priority 2 Slots, 71% Availability; or (from this plot) • 10 Priority 1 Slots, 84% (from previous plot)

  18. Conclusions • Provides Simple, Transparent Relationship Between Availability and Planned Capacities • Shows How Market Mechanisms (Auctions) Can Provide Answer to Trading Off Throughput and Reliability • Data Are Critical to Results • Insights Into Airport Behavior

  19. Questions • Phil Railsback • George Mason University • prailsba@gmu.edu

More Related