Monthly Archives: March 2013

Etihad Commercial

Very cool commercial from Etihad, my current hometown airline (here in Abu Dhabi). I found this via Christine Negroni’s Flying Lessons Blog:

But for airlines like Etihad, pitching the in flight experience is more important than so many other items on which airlines compete…

One must remember that airlines like Etihad, Emirates, and even Qatar Airlines don’t have to compete on many of the other items common to today’s airlines. These airlines are run by governments that enjoy vast oil wealth… and consequently they can create superior in flight experiences at very reasonable prices.

My wife and I would take Etihad for all our trips if we could. It really is that good.

IND Best in North America

ACI has ranked Indianapolis International Airport (IND) as the best in North America. This is based on passenger surveys taken throughout the year. I’m a bit biased here as I spent 4 years working on the Midfield Terminal Project, but the more I travel the more I see Indy as one of the best airports.

Neat to see Abu Dhabi International (AUH) ranked as the best for the Middle East. I’ll be starting work next week on their new projects. Hopefully when they transition to their midfield terminal in 2015 they can retain that ranking. Jeddah and Doha are going to give them a run for their money though.

And the other regional winners:

  • Africa: Cape Town (CPT)
  • Asia-Pacific: Seoul Incheon (ICN)
  • Europe: Moscow Sheremetyevo (SVO)
  • Latin America – Caribbean: Cancun (CUN)

Photo – Boy And His Trains

Totally my son

Well, this is kind of a picture of trains. This is my oldest playing with this wooden train set. You are actually looking at the rear end of this train. The black locomotive is actually serving as a helper unit.

I’ll likely find ways to shamelessly post photos of my boys from time to time. This photo highlights just how much fun my boy has with this toy trains, planes, or cars. He’s reminded me of why I like transportation engineering so much… it’s just a big kid’s version of the toys I used to play with.

Not-So-Green Cars

The Wall Street Journal has a great article on the environmental impacts of green cars.

A 2012 comprehensive life-cycle analysis in Journal of Industrial Ecology shows that almost half the lifetime carbon-dioxide emissions from an electric car come from the energy used to produce the car, especially the battery. The mining of lithium, for instance, is a less than green activity. By contrast, the manufacture of a gas-powered car accounts for 17% of its lifetime carbon-dioxide emissions.

Read the whole piece.

Remember the whole “Cash for Clunkers” fiasco a few years back… where the government gave people money to get their old cars off the road. Couple that policy with the government subsidies for electric cars and you’ve actually got a situation where the government is funding an overall bigger carbon footprint. The government is notorious for missing these kinds of unintended consequences.

In 2006, as gas prices were rising, the daily drive to work in my 4×4 Toyota was hurting the pocketbook with each fill up. I started looking around for an old Honda Civic to make my daily commute in. I bought a 1987 Honda Civic that consistently got around 38 miles-per-gallon. I paid $900. I was very cognizant of the fact that I was reducing my fuel consumption, keeping an older car on the road, and being far less wasteful. That was a far better stewardship of resources than anyone buying a brand-new Tesla.

We’ve got to start looking at the whole picture.

Positive Train Control

One of the major undertakings for the railroads in the USA right now is Positive Train Control, or PTC. This is a requirement of the Rail Safety Improvement Act of 2008 and is a fairly sizable unfunded mandate. The railroads are largely picking up the dime for this work and they have a deadline of 2015 to get all the nation’s Class I railroads operating on PTC.

International Railway Journal is reporting that both AAR, the FRA, and major commuter railroads have all expressed doubts about meeting the deadline.

Sounds like NTSB chairwoman Deborah Hershman is pushing back for now though:

“What is hard is when our recommendations go unheeded and we see the same accident over and over again and more lives needlessly cut short,” she said. “The technology and the tools to implement PTC are available. Perhaps what we need to hear about is not what can’t be done, but what can be done.”

It isn’t exactly a recommendation, it’s a Congressional mandate, so the railroads have to comply. The railroads aren’t exactly a source of numerous, frequently-repeated accidents. Ultimately, these are easy words for a government bureaucrat, but it’s the railroads footing the bill.

From the IRJ article it is clear that the railroads are definitely making an effort at this. A system like this takes time and has to be commissioned carefully so that it, in and of itself, doesn’t cause more safety issues than it fixes. Give them a break Ms. Chairwoman, and give them some credit where due.

Air Tower Closures

So the FAA is pushing forward with tower closures and it looks like Lubbock, Texas may be losing it’s night shift.. The reporter for this story, Adam Young, did some follow-up with UPS and Southwest Airlines about their use of the local airport. Both operators don’t seem overly concerned about the lack of a night shift controller.

What if these tower closings and reduced hours end up having no real affect on operations? Budget cuts well executed I’d say then… wouldn’t you? I’d also like to know where we could save even more money.