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Title: Examining the economic costs of the 2003 Halloween storm effects on the North Hemisphere aviation using flight data in 2019
Authors: Xue, D 
Yang, J
Liu, Z 
Yu, S 
Issue Date: Mar-2023
Source: Space weather, Mar. 2023, v. 21, no. 3, e2022SW003381
Abstract: Space weather can impede normal aviation operations through communication blackouts, GNSS-based navigation and surveillance failures, and elevated cosmic radiation, consequently resulting in necessary flight plan adjustments and considerable economic costs. Although space weather effects have been heavily emphasized, the literature on the economic effects on aviation is limited. In this study, we estimate the economic impacts from the perspective of air traffic management, assuming an extremely strong space weather event like the 2003 Halloween solar storm would occur in 2019 with a booming air transport industry in recent years. We find that (a) as the high-frequency communication blackouts may lead to polar flight rerouting and cancellations, possible daily economic costs could range from €0.21 million to €2.20 million per day; (b) during the satellite navigation failure period in the continental United States, as aircraft utilizes ground navigation aids as a backup, the increased flying time and disrupted descent approach operations may lead to additional cost of €2.43 million; (c) a surveillance failure can reduce airspace capacity and increase the workload of air traffic controllers, resulting in fatigue and perhaps risking flight safety; (d) to prevent massive cosmic radiation exposure, the economic costs of flight cancellations can be from €2.77 million to €48.97 million, depending on the cosmic radiation dose limits for a given plan. Our study indicates that severe space weather events may briefly disrupt normal aviation operations and cause substantial economic losses if future aviation equipment and technology are fragile to its effects.
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc.
Journal: Space weather 
ISSN: 1539-4956
EISSN: 1542-7390
DOI: 10.1029/2022SW003381
Rights: © 2023. The Authors.
This is an open access article underthe terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits use,distribution and reproduction in anymedium, provided the original work isproperly cited.
The following publication Xue, D., Yang, J., Liu, Z., & Yu, S. (2023). Examining the economic costs of the 2003 Halloween storm effects on the North Hemisphere aviation using flight data in 2019. Space Weather, 21, e2022SW003381 is available at https://doi.org/10.1029/2022SW003381.
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