In 2016, Hawaiian Airlines became the first carrier to operate a demonstration flight between Auckland and Honolulu showcasing best practices in operational performance that greatly reduce fuel burn and carbon emissions. Hawaiian’s Earth Day flight of 8 hours and 54 minutes saved 3,260 pounds of fuel, reducing carbon emissions by five metric tons, after adhering to seven environmental markers outlined by the Asia and Pacific Initiative to Reduce Emissions (ASPIRE), a group of worldwide aviation leaders dedicated to advancing environmental stewardship in the industry. The results equate to removing 154 cars from the road when annualized based on three weekly flights, according to EPA calculations (Hawaiian flies five times weekly between Honolulu and Auckland). Hawaiian also conducted an ASPIRE flight between Honolulu and Brisbane, resulting in similar benefits.
Our flight team seeks to use these strategies whenever possible. They include single-engine taxiing, adjusting routes for more efficient flying based on fuel optimization and forecast winds, and landing with minimal changes in engine thrust, among other efforts.
Hawaiian’s use of an innovative, eco-friendly engine washing technology earned us the first-ever aviation based carbon credits in 2012 for reducing its carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by nearly 22,000 metric tons over a six-year period. Hawaiian’s reduction of CO2 emissions using Pratt & Whitney’s patented EcoPower engine washing system has had the equivalent effect of taking 700 cars off the road annually. Today, we include detergent in our engine washing to further boost our efficiency.
Each 5.5 pounds of weight we eliminate from aircraft operated on our transpacific routes translates to roughly one less ton of carbon emissions each year, so we slimmed down our serving carts and loaded our pilots’ flights plans on iPads instead of brick-heavy binders. Our flight crew also recycles cans, bottles and menus.