Royal Oak Tribune

Google: flight search tool can help you fly ‘greener’

- By Matt Ott

SILVER SPRING, MD. » Searching for flights on Google just got “greener.”

A new search feature rolled out Wednesday tells users which flights have lower carbon emissions, giving them the ability to choose flights based on carbon emissions just as they would price or the number of layovers.

A basic search for flights will give an estimate of how many kilograms of carbon dioxide the flight will spew from start to finish. Users can prioritize their search by emissions, much like they can by price, if desired. Flights with emissions below the median get highlighte­d in green.

Google said the estimates are a combinatio­n of data from the European Environmen­tal Agency and flight-specific informatio­n it gets from airlines and other providers. That data could include an aircraft’s age, model and configurat­ion, the speed and altitude it flies at and the distance between the flight’s origin and destinatio­n.

Some flights may not have estimates because of a lack of data on certain aircraft or other missing informatio­n, Google said. The company added that the estimates don’t yet take into account what direction the plane is heading — a potentiall­y significan­t factor if flying into or with the jetstream, or whether or not the flight is using biofuels or other alternativ­es.

Using the new tool, the least polluting flights from the Washington, DC area to Chicago are all United flights using Boeing 737s. The 128 kilograms of carbon dioxide falls 21% below the median. At the other end of the list — the biggest polluter — is a Frontier Airline Bombardier regional jet departing from Baltimore and making stops in Miami and Las Vegas while emitting 779 kilograms of carbon dioxide.

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