Boston Herald

Taylor Swift’s jet-setting ways under scrutiny

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PHILADELPH­IA >> For weeks, scrutiny over singer Taylor Swift’s travel in private jets has been bubbling up on social media, with people pointing out the planet-warming emissions of carbon dioxide released with every flight.

The megastar is dating Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, one of the NFL’s most celebrated players. The growing romance between the couple has been closely watched, with Swift showing up at several games — which has meant much travel on private jets. The chatter got even louder after the Chiefs beat the Baltimore Ravens last week, sending them to the Super Bowl, which is in Las Vegas on Feb. 11.

Swift, the hitmaker whose dominance of pop culture now includes the first tour to gross more than $1 billion, is the latest in a long list of celebritie­s, government officials and elite businesspe­ople to come under scrutiny about private jet travel.

If Swift attends the Super Bowl, she will be traveling from Tokyo, where she is on tour. That will mean more than 19,400 miles (30,500 kilometers) by private jet in just under two weeks. Just how much carbon dioxide will that be?

While exact carbon emissions depend on many factors, such as flight paths and number of passengers, a rough estimate is possible, said Gregory Keoleian, codirector of the Center for Sustainabl­e Systems at the University of Michigan. Traveling 19,400 miles on a Dassault Falcon 900LX, one of Swift’s jets, could release more than 200,000 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions, he said.

That would be about 14 times as much as the average American household emits in a year, according to data from the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion.

How realistic commercial travel would be for Swift is open for debate. After all, she’s so famous that even if she wanted to, flying on commercial flights might be chaotic for an airline crew and any public airport she frequents.

The controvers­y over Swift’s use of private jets illustrate­s the “great disparity” between the wealthy and lower-income people when it comes to greenhouse gas emissions each person generates, said Julia Stein, a professor at University of California, Los Angeles School of Law.

“You’re seeing this play out on kind of a microcosmi­c scale (with Swift), but that’s true too of industrial­ized countries their carbon emissions historical­ly,” she said.

Swift is the latest of many famous people to be scrutinize­d over pollution from their globetrott­ing. Elon Musk, Bill Gates, Leonardo DiCaprio and many others have periodical­ly gotten attention for their travel on private jets.

“It’s striking that Ms. Swift gets so much of the outrage when private jet customers are overwhelmi­ngly men over 50,” said Jeff Colgan, a professor of political science at Brown University. “The focus really should be on a broader class of people.”

Big events, from Olympic Games to the annual U.N. climate summit have also been criticized because of the thousands of people flying in to attend, travel that all contribute­s to climate change.

All air travel creates emissions, though private jets produce much more per person. A 2023 study by the Institute for Policy Studies found that private jets emit at least 10 times more pollutants per passenger compared to commercial planes.

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? For weeks, scrutiny over Taylor Swift, seen here with Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, and her travel has been bubbling up on social media, with people pointing out the planet-warming emissions of carbon dioxide released with every private jet flight she takes.
JULIO CORTEZ, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS For weeks, scrutiny over Taylor Swift, seen here with Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, and her travel has been bubbling up on social media, with people pointing out the planet-warming emissions of carbon dioxide released with every private jet flight she takes.

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