Airport slot co-ordination is an intriguing science; the allocation of slots is highly competitive and the top slots fiercely guarded. Artemis Aerospace investigates how airline slots are apportioned. WISTON, England , Aug.

13, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- As you follow a flight on Flightradar or gaze up at contrails criss-crossing a clear blue sky, have you ever wondered exactly how aircraft slots are organised? It may be that you thought it's a global free-for-all, and that any airline can decide to put on a flight from Heathrow to Sydney whenever they felt like it, and if they then change their mind and want to go from Gatwick to Melbourne there's nothing to stop them from doing that. Well, you'd be wrong - each and every flight worldwide from a major airport has to stick to its allocated slot. In the UK, slots are then allocated by the operator and airport-funded company Airport Coordination Ltd (ACL), which was the world's first independent slot coordinator, and which assigns slots for winter and summer travel.

There are three levels of this coordination: As slots are limited and many are in great demand, some airlines used to acquire them in order to assert their dominance over a particular route, blocking competition but not actually using them themselves. This practice was banned by the introduction of a series of rules, the main one of which is the 80/20 'use it or lose it' rule. This states that airlines must use at least 80% of their slot allocation per airport, and if the.