www.bloomberg.com
Open in
urlscan Pro
151.101.1.73
Public Scan
URL:
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-03-10/airline-pollution-is-soaring-and-nobody-knows-how-to-fix-it
Submission: On March 13 via api from DE — Scanned from DE
Submission: On March 13 via api from DE — Scanned from DE
Form analysis
0 forms found in the DOMText Content
Skip to content Bloomberg the Company & Its ProductsThe Company & its ProductsBloomberg Terminal Demo RequestBloomberg Anywhere Remote LoginBloomberg Anywhere LoginBloomberg Customer SupportCustomer Support * BLOOMBERG Connecting decision makers to a dynamic network of information, people and ideas, Bloomberg quickly and accurately delivers business and financial information, news and insight around the world FOR CUSTOMERS * Bloomberg Anywhere Remote Login * Software Updates * Manage Products and Account Information SUPPORT Americas+1 212 318 2000 EMEA+44 20 7330 7500 Asia Pacific+65 6212 1000 * COMPANY * About * Careers * Diversity and Inclusion * Tech At Bloomberg * Philanthropy * Sustainability * Bloomberg London * Bloomberg Beta * Gender-Equality Index COMMUNICATIONS * Press Announcements * Press Contacts FOLLOW * Facebook * Instagram * LinkedIn * Twitter * YouTube * PRODUCTS * Bloomberg Terminal * Data * Trading * Risk * Indices INDUSTRY PRODUCTS * Bloomberg Law * Bloomberg Tax * Bloomberg Government * BloombergNEF * MEDIA * Bloomberg Markets * Bloomberg Technology * Bloomberg Pursuits * Bloomberg Politics * Bloomberg Opinion * Bloomberg Businessweek * Bloomberg Live Conferences * Bloomberg Radio * Bloomberg Television * News Bureaus MEDIA SERVICES * Bloomberg Media Distribution * Advertising * COMPANY * About * Careers * Diversity and Inclusion * Tech At Bloomberg * Philanthropy * Sustainability * Bloomberg London * Bloomberg Beta * Gender-Equality Index COMMUNICATIONS * Press Announcements * Press Contacts FOLLOW * Facebook * Instagram * LinkedIn * Twitter * YouTube * PRODUCTS * Bloomberg Terminal * Data * Trading * Risk * Indices INDUSTRY PRODUCTS * Bloomberg Law * Bloomberg Tax * Bloomberg Government * Bloomberg Environment * BloombergNEF * MEDIA * Bloomberg Markets * Bloomberg Technology * Bloomberg Pursuits * Bloomberg Politics * Bloomberg Opinion * Bloomberg Businessweek * Bloomberg Live Conferences * Bloomberg Radio * Bloomberg Television * News Bureaus MEDIA SERVICES * Bloomberg Media Distribution * Advertising * BLOOMBERG Connecting decision makers to a dynamic network of information, people and ideas, Bloomberg quickly and accurately delivers business and financial information, news and insight around the world FOR CUSTOMERS * Bloomberg Anywhere Remote Login * Software Updates * Manage Contracts and Orders SUPPORT Americas+1 212 318 2000 EMEA+44 20 7330 7500 Asia Pacific+65 6212 1000 Sign InSubscribeSearch Live TVMarkets Chevron Down EconomicsIndustriesTechPoliticsBusinessweekOpinionMore Chevron Down US Edition Chevron Down Menu Subscribe Business Climate Changed AIRLINES WERE SUPPOSED TO FIX THEIR POLLUTION PROBLEM. IT’S JUST GETTING WORSE Hundreds of millions of new passengers are coming, and there’s no solution in sight. FacebookTwitterLinkedInEmailLink Gift Expand A passenger aircraft takes off from London City Airport. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg FacebookTwitterLinkedInEmailLink GiftGift this article Have a confidential tip for our reporters? Get in Touch Before it’s here, it’s on the Bloomberg Terminal Bloomberg Terminal LEARN MORE FacebookTwitterLinkedInEmailLink Gift By William Wilkes March 10, 2019 at 9:00 AM GMT+1 BookmarkSave Lock This article is for subscribers only. Environmental activists recoil for a reason when the super-rich fly private jets to forums that preach carbon neutrality. Airplane pollution levels really are going through the stratosphere and nobody seems to have a viable plan to rein them in. While energy generation and agriculture currently dwarf aviation’s 1.3 percent share of all human-caused greenhouse gases, emissions from air travel are accelerating many times faster. That puts the industry on track to become the single biggest emitter of carbon dioxide within three decades if the predicted cuts in other sectors materialize, data and projections from UN agencies show. Have a confidential tip for our reporters? Get in Touch Before it’s here, it’s on the Bloomberg Terminal Bloomberg Terminal LEARN MORE MORE FROM BLOOMBERG Stock Traders Bracing for Worst Shrug Off Hot CPI: Markets Wrap Gold-Medalist Coders Build an AI That Can Do Their Job for Them Putin Has Russian Elite in a Frenzy Over Their Political Futures Why It Feels Like Everyone Drives a New Porsche 911 TOP READS Will Marine Le Pen Succeed Macron as President of France? by William Horobin and Ania Nussbaum How a Physics Whiz Made a Killing Betting on Nature’s Catastrophes by Gautam Naik This AI Architect Will Design Your Climate-Friendly Dream Home by Todd Woody Snowmobiles Finally Get the Tesla Treatment by Kyle Stock HomeBTV+Market DataOpinionAudioOriginalsMagazineEvents News MarketsEconomicsTechnologyPoliticsGreenCryptoAI Work & Life WealthPursuitsBusinessweekCityLabEqualityPursuitsWork Shift Market Data StocksCommoditiesRates & BondsCurrenciesFuturesSectorsEconomic Calendar Explore NewslettersExplainersThe Big TakeGraphicsSubmit a TipAbout Us Terms of ServiceManage CookiesTrademarksPrivacy Policy CareersMade in NYCAdvertise Ad Choices Help©2024 Bloomberg L.P. All Rights Reserved. Get unlimited access today. Explore Offers Arrow Right Subscribe now for unlimited access to Bloomberg.com and the Bloomberg app Global news that uncovers a new tomorrow. Cancel anytime. Subscribe now for unlimited access to Bloomberg.com and the Bloomberg app Claim This Offer