THE NORTH ATLANTIC AIR-TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEM: ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF PROPOSED CHANGES

The study is a cost-benefit analysis to determine the economic impact of implementing certain FAA-specified technical changes to the North Atlantic Air-Traffic Control System. As such, it attempts to determine which system would afford the maximum benefit to the community of countries who provide an...

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Main Authors: Skaggs,Allen H., Asher,Norman J., Halfyard,Richard, Parker,Elizabeth
Other Authors: INSTITUTE FOR DEFENSE ANALYSES ARLINGTON VA ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL STUDIES DIV
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1965
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/AD0655134
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=AD0655134
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author Skaggs,Allen H.
Asher,Norman J.
Halfyard,Richard
Parker,Elizabeth
author2 INSTITUTE FOR DEFENSE ANALYSES ARLINGTON VA ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL STUDIES DIV
author_facet Skaggs,Allen H.
Asher,Norman J.
Halfyard,Richard
Parker,Elizabeth
author_sort Skaggs,Allen H.
collection Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database
description The study is a cost-benefit analysis to determine the economic impact of implementing certain FAA-specified technical changes to the North Atlantic Air-Traffic Control System. As such, it attempts to determine which system would afford the maximum benefit to the community of countries who provide and use the system. Accordingly, it recommends which among the technically feasible changes in facilities, services, and procedures are economically justified. Two basic types of changes were proposed: additional ground equipment to increase the capacity of the transition areas, and reduction of separation criteria in the oceanic area. The study shows the extent to which various reductions of separation criteria in the oceanic area would reduce the cost of aircraft diversions. Equipment changes in the transition areas are designed to increase the traffic-handling capacities of these areas and thereby to reduce the cost of aircraft delays during peak-flow periods. The study concludes that non-automated surveillance radar coverage should be extended over the entire transition area. (Author)
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genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
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institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftdtic
op_relation http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/AD0655134
op_rights APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE
op_source DTIC AND NTIS
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spelling ftdtic:AD0655134 2025-01-16T23:36:03+00:00 THE NORTH ATLANTIC AIR-TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEM: ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF PROPOSED CHANGES Skaggs,Allen H. Asher,Norman J. Halfyard,Richard Parker,Elizabeth INSTITUTE FOR DEFENSE ANALYSES ARLINGTON VA ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL STUDIES DIV 1965-09 text/html http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/AD0655134 http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=AD0655134 en eng http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/AD0655134 APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE DTIC AND NTIS Economics and Cost Analysis Air Navigation and Guidance (*AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEMS ECONOMICS) ATLANTIC OCEAN COST EFFECTIVENESS AIR TRAFFIC COSTS FLIGHT PATHS MANAGEMENT PLANNING AND CONTROL Text 1965 ftdtic 2016-02-18T20:16:04Z The study is a cost-benefit analysis to determine the economic impact of implementing certain FAA-specified technical changes to the North Atlantic Air-Traffic Control System. As such, it attempts to determine which system would afford the maximum benefit to the community of countries who provide and use the system. Accordingly, it recommends which among the technically feasible changes in facilities, services, and procedures are economically justified. Two basic types of changes were proposed: additional ground equipment to increase the capacity of the transition areas, and reduction of separation criteria in the oceanic area. The study shows the extent to which various reductions of separation criteria in the oceanic area would reduce the cost of aircraft diversions. Equipment changes in the transition areas are designed to increase the traffic-handling capacities of these areas and thereby to reduce the cost of aircraft delays during peak-flow periods. The study concludes that non-automated surveillance radar coverage should be extended over the entire transition area. (Author) Text North Atlantic Defense Technical Information Center: DTIC Technical Reports database
spellingShingle Economics and Cost Analysis
Air Navigation and Guidance
(*AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEMS
ECONOMICS)
ATLANTIC OCEAN
COST EFFECTIVENESS
AIR TRAFFIC
COSTS
FLIGHT PATHS
MANAGEMENT PLANNING AND CONTROL
Skaggs,Allen H.
Asher,Norman J.
Halfyard,Richard
Parker,Elizabeth
THE NORTH ATLANTIC AIR-TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEM: ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF PROPOSED CHANGES
title THE NORTH ATLANTIC AIR-TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEM: ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF PROPOSED CHANGES
title_full THE NORTH ATLANTIC AIR-TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEM: ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF PROPOSED CHANGES
title_fullStr THE NORTH ATLANTIC AIR-TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEM: ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF PROPOSED CHANGES
title_full_unstemmed THE NORTH ATLANTIC AIR-TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEM: ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF PROPOSED CHANGES
title_short THE NORTH ATLANTIC AIR-TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEM: ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF PROPOSED CHANGES
title_sort north atlantic air-traffic control system: economic analysis of proposed changes
topic Economics and Cost Analysis
Air Navigation and Guidance
(*AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEMS
ECONOMICS)
ATLANTIC OCEAN
COST EFFECTIVENESS
AIR TRAFFIC
COSTS
FLIGHT PATHS
MANAGEMENT PLANNING AND CONTROL
topic_facet Economics and Cost Analysis
Air Navigation and Guidance
(*AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEMS
ECONOMICS)
ATLANTIC OCEAN
COST EFFECTIVENESS
AIR TRAFFIC
COSTS
FLIGHT PATHS
MANAGEMENT PLANNING AND CONTROL
url http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/AD0655134
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=AD0655134