The oversight community has set targets for noise production at the airports which as remain the mandate of the FAA to find solution to the problem prompting constant development of the noise safety applications at the airports (Girvin, 2009). Some of the airports and areas that have implemented the strategy includes; Frankfurt Airport in Germany and San Jose International Airport in California. Third strategy is the use of the legislation that demands that airports and airplanes pay the full cost for the damage they cost on individuals and other living things (Black et al. 2007). The penalty that has been placed on the noise that airports produce above a certain limits has helped reduce the noise with fear of making losses through charges.
The management has ensured that none of the airports produce noise that is beyond their limit accorded in order to avoid operating on the unnecessary charges. The strategy provides that the airports are given freedom to operate as per their wish with only their noise production being monitored. When found quality of producing too much noise, the charges are filled and every damage that is evaluated to have been attributed by the noise is paid by the airports. The strategy makes the airports to balance their operations to produce little noise that cannot make them incur unnecessary expenses as well as being forced to operate under the consideration of the surrounding community interests.
Some of the airports that have implemented the strategy includes; San Francisco International Airport and the Gatwick of London. The fourth strategy that is used by different airports to reduce noise is the extension of the intervals of flights landing and taking off at the airports (Kwakkel et al. 2010). A reduced time interval in flying planes is an indication that there would be continuous noise being produced at the airport. Small intervals in taking off as well as landing combine that effort that different planes provide towards producing noise at the airport.
The connection between the two provides that prolonged noise which is continuous remaining as a disturbance to the community. When the two intervals is increased, the noise produced is reduced as the plane will only land a single plane as well as taking off as one reducing the possibility of having continuous noise production. The idea has been achieved through the use of different programming software to fix the intervals. The strategy has worked best through the involvement of different bans on intervals of plans which calls for the coordination with several airports to avoid clash of programs and only planes that can be allowed to break the protocols for its operation are the emergency and research planes which are always rare in the society.
Most of this strategy has been practiced at the Gatwick and majority of United States of America airports. The fifth strategy that has been used by airports to reduce noise is the application of the satellite-based navigation systems (Van Praag & Baarsma, 2005). This system involves the evaluation and the study of the different landing angles for the planes. The increased time that the plane takes while taking off is an indication that there will be more time that the plane will take making noise and a similar case apply to landing.
With these understandings, the airports developed the strategy that will ensure that the plane lands and takes off as fast as possible to reduce the time for noise making. The airports have recommended steeper angles for taking off as well as for landing as the plane will take little time to be noticed by the surrounding society or community before it lands or reach a height which is too high to affect the community. The only challenge that the system has brought to the airports is the need to establish more precise flight paths to be used at different times of the day.
Some of the airports that have adopted and used the strategy include the United Kingdom airports such as Gatwick, Heathrow and other European-wide airports.
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