Next gen affirmative 1ac advantage-Econ



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A2: Politics-Thumpers


Both the House and Senate have passed bills in support of Next Gen-all that is needed is stable funding

Gibbons 2011, Glen. “Air Traffic Control Modernization: FAA, NextGen, GNSS, and Avionics Equipage”

http://www.insidegnss.com/node/2582/

In between partisan confrontations around the 2011 federal budget and raising the U.S. debt limit, prospects are improving for federal legislation that would provide the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) with a regular full-year budget for the first time since Fiscal Year 2007 — including support for completing the transition to a GNSS-driven air traffic control (ATC) system known as NextGen and a “public-private partnership” to equip aircraft with the needed avionics. Short for “Next Generation,” the program calls for equipage of ground ATC facilities, airports, and private aircraft with the capability for generating, displaying, and communicating real-time situational awareness using precise positions of all aircraft operating in the surrounding air space. During the past five weeks, the U.S. Senate and House passed different versions (S. 223 and H.R.658, respectively) of a Federal Aviation Research and Development Reauthorization Act that would expedite implementation of NextGen. The primary goals of NextGen are to enhance the safety, reliability, and efficiency of air transportation while reducing aviation’s adverse effects on the environment. It represents the first makeover of the U.S. air traffic management system in 60 years, first augmenting and then replacing the radar and voice-communications–based ATC system of today. But it won’t come cheap. The original estimate for implementing NextGen by 2025 — ground infrastructure, airport equipment upgrades, aircraft avionics, and so forth — was $40 billion. The FAA projected that the agency’s total spending over the first 10 years would range from $8 billion to $10 billion, and from $15 to $22 billion through 2025. A recent analysis, commissioned by the FAA’s Joint Planning and Development Office (JPDO) overseeing NextGen implementation, modeled a variety of scenarios that assumed different levels of ground capability and aircraft capability over the long term. According to this analysis, implementing the highest performance levels envisioned in the NextGen Integrated Work Plan for ground and aircraft capabilities by 2025 could increase NextGen’s costs significantly beyond $40 billion.The payoff comes in improved efficiencies and throughput in the national air space. According to the latest FAA estimates, by 2018 NextGen air traffic management (ATM) improvements will reduce total delays, in flight and on the ground, about 35 percent compared with what would happen if the modernization does not occur. The reduction in delays will provide $23 billion in cumulative benefits from 2010 through 2018 to aircraft operators, the traveling public and the FAA, saving about 1.4 billion gallons of aviation fuel during this period and cutting carbon dioxide emissions by 14 million tons.


More ev-Congressional support for next gen now

BOYLE 2012, Rebecca writer for Popsci, via NPR. “Drones Will Be Admitted to Standard US Airspace By 2015”

http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2012-02/under-newly-authorized-airspace-rules-drones-will-fly-alongside-piloted-planes-2015

Air Traffic Control The FAA's NextGen update is finally being funded. The overhaul of the nation's airspace system will include different landings for passenger planes and room for drones in human-piloted airspace. FAA



The skies are going to look very different pretty soon, and it’s been a long time coming. Congress finally passed a spending bill for the Federal Aviation Administration, allocating $63.4 billion for modernizing the country’s air traffic control systems and expanding airspace for unmanned planes within three and a half years.

By Sept. 30, 2015, drones will have to have access to U.S. airspace that is currently reserved for piloted aircraft. This applies to military, commercial and privately owned drones — so it could mean a major increase in unmanned aircraft winging through our airspace. That’s airspace to be shared with airliners, cargo planes and small private aircraft. As it is now, drones can only use some pieces of military airspace and they can patrol the nation’s borders. Some 300 public agencies can also use drones, according to the AP, but they must be at low altitudes and away from airports. The FAA has spent years planning its NextGen upgrade, a new system designed to streamline traffic at airports, save fuel and reduce air travel headaches. NextGen is a behemoth program that consists of several complementary systems, notably the Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast, or ADS-B in airspace lingo. This system uses GPS to determine aircraft location, and it will enable planes to land in a more efficient, steep glide, rather than the fuel-wasting stair-step descents of the past and present. This is already being rolled out in some places, but the new bill requires the FAA to set up new arrival procedures at the country’s 35 busiest airports. Eventually, planes will all have GPS that can update a plane’s location every second, instead of the six to 12 seconds it takes with current radar systems, AP points out. This will allow pilots to know where their planes are relative to each other, and this could help ease congestion and make for smoother taxi procedures. NextGen has been planned and debated for years, and the modernization plan has been stymied by Congressional wrangling since 2007. This new bill, which now goes to President Obama for his signature, will finally get things moving again.



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