Coordinatore | ENVISA SAS
Organization address
address: rue Oberkampf 22 contact info |
Nazionalità Coordinatore | France [FR] |
Totale costo | 99˙120 € |
EC contributo | 74˙340 € |
Programma | FP7-JTI
Specific Programme "Cooperation": Joint Technology Initiatives |
Code Call | SP1-JTI-CS-2011-01 |
Funding Scheme | JTI-CS |
Anno di inizio | 2011 |
Periodo (anno-mese-giorno) | 2011-11-16 - 2012-12-15 |
# | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
ENVISA SAS
Organization address
address: rue Oberkampf 22 contact info |
FR (PARIS) | coordinator | 31˙140.00 |
2 |
JULIEN GUILLAUME DUFOUR
Organization address
address: rue des boulangers 15 contact info |
FR (Paris) | participant | 43˙200.00 |
Esplora la "nuvola delle parole (Word Cloud) per avere un'idea di massima del progetto.
'The objective of FRARS-2 (Future Regional Aircraft Requirements Survey – Part 2) is to conduct a survey of airlines’ high-level requirements for future regional aircraft, with specific focus on North American and African operators. This new survey is the continuation of a study conducted under the first Clean Sky Call for Proposals (Future Green Regional Aircraft requirements).
In addition to an extended geographical coverage, the present study will bring innovative multi-criteria decision-making support methodologies and tools in order to translate the opinions expressed by the airlines' executives into concrete technology options for the Clean Sky GRA ITD.
The proposed consortium (ENVISA & SustainAvia) has a long-time expertise in the fields of airline surveys and multi-criteria / interdependence models. Both companies have successfully cooperated on a joint survey of worldwide air operators and regulators under Clean Sky SGO ITD's CARING project. Furthermore, the consortium has multiple contacts with high executives of operators in both regions of interest for the present study - North America and Africa.'
EU-funded researchers conducted a survey of high-level requirements for future regional aircraft. The specific focus was on African, American and Asian operators.
As demand for regional air transport is increasing, the aviation industry is under pressure to reduce aircraft environmental impact while simultaneously maintaining safety and efficiency. Radical changes in aircraft construction, technologies and operational practices are thus also required to comply with increasingly greener regulatory frameworks.
Considering the EU Clean Sky and Green Regional Airline initiatives, scientists initiated the EU-funded project 'Future regional aircraft requirements survey - Part 2' (http://www.sustainavia.com/en/cleansky/frars-2-project.php (FRARS-2)) . Researchers collected information from regional airlines outside the EU and established the relative importance of various criteria. These concerned important decision-making features for selecting technologies and designs that best suit future regional aircraft. The team considered aspects such as sustainability, operability, and passenger capacity and comfort trade-off. This survey was the continuation of a previous data collection campaign focusing on Europe.
The project used a combination of conventional questionnaires and a simple version of a multi-criteria decision-making (MCDM) tool based on the analytical hierarchy process (AHP). This is a statistical method that provides a comprehensive and rational framework for structuring a decision problem and representing and quantifying its elements. It enables airline operators to establish priorities amongst the hierarchy elements by making a series of judgments based on pairwise comparisons.
Based on the AHP analysis findings, operating costs and performance factors (such as aircraft weight reduction) were equally important for passenger and cargo airlines. In addition to these, the survey revealed that environmental factors (such as greenhouse gas emissions) are considered when outlining requirements for future regional aircraft. Finally, mainly low-cost passenger airlines considered seating capacity an important factor. This finding is in contrast with the considerations of other, more premium airlines when purchasing new aircraft.
The developed MCDM tool could give an excellent opportunity to integrate sustainability in decision-making processes. Thus, Clean Sky actors and any other relevant decision makers will be able to make rational decisions on environmental, societal and economical aspects for future projects.