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The impact of the great recession on Irish air travel: An intermodal accessibility analysis
Institution:1. Department of Economics, Frostburg State University, Guild Center, 101 Braddock Rd, Frostburg, MD 21532-2303, United States;2. Department of Finance, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV, United States;1. Department of chemistry, Acharya Nagarjuna University, Nagarjuna Nagar 522 510, Andhra Pradesh, India;2. Department of Physics, Vignan Institute of Technology & Science, Hyderabad 508284, Telangana, India;3. Department of Chemistry, J.K.C College, Guntur 522006, Andhra Pradesh, India
Abstract:This paper quantifies the changes in accessibility at small area scale arising from the combined effects of dramatic air traffic declines and a greatly expanded motorway network in Ireland during the period of the great recession. The subsequent policy decisions by government are assessed in light of the intermodal accessibility changes identified. The Irish Government engaged in an extensive motorway construction programme throughout the 2000s, greatly increasing the overall length of the inter-urban motorway network. The essential air transport services programme put in place in the 1990s to guarantee a minimum level of air access to disadvantaged regions was significantly reduced at the end of the 2008–2011 period, with only two of the six regional airports continuing to have any form of subsidised public service obligation for the period 2011–2014. In this study, small area datasets are used to measure the net impact of these changes on air transport accessibility in Ireland and the potential spatial inequalities that arise as a result of these changes. An inter-modal accessibility approach is used where the physical characteristics of the road transport network to airports and the network structure characteristics of the air transport system are taken into account to evaluate the levels of air transport accessibility at the small-area district level. Results from the analysis show that the improved surface access to the larger Irish airports (Dublin and Belfast) has enhanced the range of European and global locations directly accessible by air for many communities in Ireland. The net effect of these changes has been to concentrate air traffic at the largest Irish airports.
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