Airlines lighten load

With jet fuel up 200 percent from 2007 figures to $3.17 per gallon, airlines are looking for ways to trim extra weight from flights in order to conserve fuel. According to an AP report, fuel made up 27 percent of operating expenses for U.S. airlines — making it the No. 1 expense for airlines. In their search to cut the fat — especially in areas where passengers are unlikely to notice — carriers have pulled out unused ovens, magazine racks and trash compactors during the past few years. Some removed paper manuals in the cockpit and installed electronic maintenance logbooks. “The pressure is immense” to cut weight, said John Heimlich, chief economist for the Air Transport Association of America, an industry trade group, told the AP. “Every penny more per gallon adds $195 million to the industry’s expenses per year. You simply cannot make all of that up with fare increases.”

Comments

One Response to “Airlines lighten load”

  1. On April 1st, 2008 at 12:05 pm Christine Thill said

    If all airlines would have their Magazines and the SkyMall in either the terminals or to be picked up as an option by only those interested in reading them aboard, they’d save a lot of weight on each flight.

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