Miami Herald (Sunday)

Flying is more turbulent. Airlines better buckle up

- BY LARA WILLIAMS

Tens of thousands of flights take off and land without incident every day, all around the world. So when something tragic does happen, the world’s eyes become glued to the story – especially if it reveals the deadly side of an extremely common flight experience.

One man was killed and many others injured when a Singapore Airlines Ltd. flight encountere­d severe turbulence en route to Singapore from London on Tuesday. The airplane, a Boeing 777-300 ER, had to make an emergency landing in Bangkok. The deceased had a heart condition, which officials think may be behind his death.

We don’t yet know exactly what caused the agitated air currents, and an investigat­ion is underway. It’s currently the monsoon season in Southeast Asia, and the resulting stormy skies may have contribute­d to the turbulence experience­d by the plane. But we’d be foolish to ignore the role that the climate crisis is playing in making air travel choppier.

Most commonly caused by mountains, storms and jet streams, turbulence can be described simply as rough air. At its mildest, an aircraft may only experience slight erratic changes in altitude, but at the severe end, turbulence can cause large abrupt changes in altitude and angle of the plane. Extreme

turbulence could even cause structural damage to the aircraft, though modern planes are built to withstand a lot.

In the case of mountains and storms, rough air is fairly easy to avoid, but it’s possible to bump into turbulence where there are no clouds in sight. This clear-air turbulence (CAT) is impossible to see or predict, and yet can cause damage to aircraft and harm those inside. These sudden unexpected jolts are the most dangerous as they can occur while passengers and staff are moving around. In April, a man broke his leg as he returned from the toilet when an Air New Zealand flight to Auckland from Bali hit some turbulence and suddenly “dropped.”

It therefore is the sort of thing that might keep a pilot up at night – and it’s been getting worse.

As our planet’s atmosphere warms, wind shears – variations in wind direction or speed – within jet streams are increasing and therefore strengthen­ing clear-air turbulence. A 2023 study from researcher­s at the University of Reading showed that in the past 40 years, severe clear-air turbulence increased to 27.4 hours in 2020 from 17.7 hours in 1979 for an average point over the North Atlantic.

Last year, I wrote about all the ways in which the need to decarboniz­e flying was going to make air travel more expensive. But it’s clear large investment­s are needed to help aviation cope with the meteorolog­ical effects of climate change, too.

Aircrafts are designed to withstand the worst that turbulence might throw at them. But as researcher­s point out in a 2017 study, many of the aircraft that will be flying in the second half of the century are currently being designed, so work ought to done to determine whether projection­s for turbulence necessitat­e any design or operationa­l changes. A 2021 report from the National Transporta­tion Safety Board made 24 recommenda­tions aimed at reducing the incidence of turbulence accidents and associated injuries, including having flight attendants – who are seriously injured more often than passengers – be seated and belted earlier during the descent phase.

More significan­t investment­s should also be made into remote sensing of CAT and improved forecasts. On the detection front, there’s promise being found in updated radar systems, including laser-based radar, as well as a new type of infrasound microphone developed by NASA.

Any investment­s will be worth it for the safety and comfort of passengers alone, but aviation executives will also be happy to know that the investment­s could lead to savings – or at least stop potential losses escalating. After all, turbulence isn’t cheap. The cost of choppy air to U.S. airlines is estimated to be as much as $500 million annually, thanks to injuries, aircraft damage and flight delays, according to the National Center for Atmospheri­c Research. That will only shoot up as severe turbulence increases.

In a way, aviation is its own worst enemy: What it contribute­s in greenhouse gas emissions, it gets back in heightened dangers, costs and difficulti­es. The industry – and its passengers – will need to buckle up.

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