Abstract

Airports stimulate tourism and trade and are a vital link in any country’s tourism infrastructure and economy. Large airports such as South Africa’s busiest airport, the OR Tambo International Airport, in Ekurhuleni, Gauteng, are usually located on the periphery of cities, usually on land that forms part of the peri-urban economy, reserved perhaps for farming or left undeveloped. As a result, such land often becomes a wildlife haven within the more “urbanized” or developed areas. Unfortunately, this places wildlife, especially birds on a collision course with aircraft. So much so that bird and other animal strikes cost the aviation industry millions of US dollars annually. Therefore, it is essential to reduce the number of wildlife strikes, not only lower the risk of damage to aircraft, increase passenger safety and reduce operational delays, but also prevent a decline in local wildlife populations. Thus, this paper argues that South Africa must improve its management of land-use close to airports to minimize the potential for wildlife strikes. In that regard, this study catalogs the different habitats and land-use types surrounding OR Tambo International Airport, identifying potential bird hazard zones using kernel density analysis. This identifies which areas pose the highest risk of bird strikes. Although land-use and land zoning by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) recommends a 13 km buffer zone around airports, this study shows that land-use in the buffer zone must also take potential bird strikes into account. Thus, airport operators need to work with land-use planning authorities and neighboring stakeholders to do so.

Highlights

  • Airports play a critical economic role, serving as hubs for commerce, trade and tourism (Luke and Walters, 2010)

  • In South Africa, bird species location and number data is mostly limited to that documented by citizen scientists within the context of the Southern African Bird Atlas Project 2 (SABAP2), a project managed by the Animal Demography Unit (ADU) of the University of Cape Town (McKay et al, 2018)

  • Frequency of sighting and size criteria, 6 potentially hazardous species were identified from the SABAP2 data. (All species that rarely cited and are smaller than 50 g are disregarded according to the Bird Hazard ranking system)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Airports play a critical economic role, serving as hubs for commerce, trade and tourism (Luke and Walters, 2010). Airports are crucial for both job and enterprise creation (Mokhele, 2017). In this regard, the Air Transport Action Group [ATAG], 2020 reported that the global economic impact of air transportation through direct, indirect, or induced means accounts for around 4.1% of the world’s Gross Domestic Product. Within a globalized economy the rise of “airport cities” or “aerotropolises,” where the urban economy takes shape around aviation-related businesses and associated developments has been noted (Kasarda, 2006). One such aerotropolis is Ekurhuleni, Gauteng, South Africa, population 4 million.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call