Skip to main content

Contrail Detection and Coverage Estimation across Air Route Traffic Control Centers from Satellite Observations

Paper ID

Conference

SESAR Innovation Days

Year

2025

Theme

Meteorology, Environment and Fuel Efficiency

Project Name

Translation and Integration of Weather data from Localized Aviation MOS Program with FACET

Keywords:

Aviation sustainability; Non-CO2 effects; Contrail coverage; Remote sensing; Deep learning

Authors

Rong Tang, Kam K.H. Ng, Yutong Chen and Yan Xu

DOI

https://doi.org/10.61009/SID.2025.1.40

Abstract

Contrails are recognised as a net warming contribu- tor to aviation-induced climate impact, and their detection from satellite imagery provides an observational basis for estimating coverage and informing rerouting strategies. While informative, continental-scale estimates are insufficient for operational use, being constrained by air traffic management complexity and costs from CO2/non-CO2 trade-offs. A more feasible approach is to identify contrail-intense air traffic control regions and corridors, where targeted rerouting could deliver greater climate benefit at lower operational cost. We propose a joint spatial–frequency loss that conditions learning to emphasise contrail samples while capturing their line-shaped structures. On the OpenContrails dataset [1], our method consistently improves detection across multiple binarisation thresholds, achieving a global dice score of 70.23%. The proposed method is applied to GOES-16 imagery to estimate contrail coverage over CONUS and at the scale of individual Air Route Traffic Control Centers (ARTCCs). Multi-threshold analysis yields a range of contrail coverage from 0.015% to 0.254%, with a moderate average of 0.115% across 60 days in 2024. The moderate estimate reveals clear seasonal cycles, with greater contrail occurrence in winter and spring, and diurnal peaks between 08:00 and 10:00 local time across most regions. Joint evaluation with meteorological conditions further identifies contrail-intense zones and corridors, implying an uneven potential for region-specific contrail mitigation due to notable anomalies between ARTCCs.