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Crazy Ways Airlines Have Reduced Weight On Planes, To Lower Fuel Costs

a woman standing in a row of seats on an airplane

When you’re an airline (or any large-scale entity that serves the public), every little bit helps the bottom line.

Is anybody else old enough to remember yogurt cartons that were 8 ounces? Full half-gallon containers of ice cream? When did metal toys begin to be made out of plastic? When did hotels stop changing the sheets every day?

Those little changes here and there, be it shrinking a package but charging the same amount, or using cheaper materials, or cutting corners by stopping a service that’s conveniently also good for the environment, are small ways that companies can save more money. The way airlines in particular do it is pretty fascinating…

Saving fuel, one olive at a time

I once read that when an airline removed just one olive from each of its in-flight salads in the 1980s, it wound up saving them $55,000 a year. Besides not having to buy as many olives, they also didn’t have to deal with as much weight per flight. Not that several dozen olives per flight cost all that much, but when you’re talking about a big flying tube that can use up to 1 gallon of fuel per second, every little bit really does help.

Nowadays, of course, it helps immensely that airlines don’t give full meals to most passengers anymore; you don’t have to worry about olives in salads when only the 20 people in First Class are getting a salad, and that’s only if it’s a longer flight. But there are lots of other ways that corners have been cut…

Creative cuts

It’s not just individual airlines, either – lots of airlines are doing lots of little (and not so little) things to cut weight:

Of course, not all ways to save weight have been as successful…or in good taste….

So yeah – lots of airlines have figured out lots of ways to cut costs. Sure would be nice if they passed some of those savings on to us, huh?

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