Incredible graphic shows hundreds of jets leaving the Super Bowl… so where did they all go?

Incredible graphic shows hundreds of jets leaving the Super Bowl... so where did they all go?

No, the United States Air Force did not unveil a new fleet of jets in the New Orleans area late Sunday night. 

Rather, the caravan of private aircraft taking off along Louisiana’s Lake Pontchartrain belonged the many billionaires and celebrities who fled the aftermath of Super Bowl LIX at the Superdome.

As shown by air traffic X account @Flightradar24, hundreds and hundreds of private planes were tracked on their way out of New Orleans on Sunday night.

Lakefront Airport aviation director Bruce Martin previously told Fox8live.com that the public facility was getting between 200 and 400 aircraft landing per day. In total, he estimated, around 1,200 private jets were expected, and that doesn’t include the traffic at the larger Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport, which main handlers commercial airliners.

‘You’re going to get the tourists flying commercial going into [Louis Armstrong Airport],’ Lakefront executive director Louis Capo told Fox8Live.com in a January 31 piece. ‘Here, you’re going to get the NFL owners, the major corporations.’

DailyMail.com has reached out to Martin and Capo for updated figures.

While the jets did scatter across the country, a steady stream of aircraft flew to Palm Beach

While the jets did scatter across the country, a steady stream of aircraft flew to Palm Beach

Trump waves as he boards Air Force One in West Palm Beach en route to Super Bowl LIX

Trump waves as he boards Air Force One in West Palm Beach en route to Super Bowl LIX

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Judging by the animated time-lapsed graphic, many of the jets flew back to a few specific locations. Naturally some flights were seen returning to the Philadelphia or the New Jersey area, where many wealthy Eagles fans reside, as well as the Kansas-Missouri border for Chiefs supporters. 

But there was a conspicuous amount of traffic returning to the Palm Beach, Florida area, which makes sense. Not only did President Donald Trump take Air Force One from Palm Beach to New Orleans for the game, but other attendees such as billionaire New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft also own homes in the area. However, it is unclear if Kraft flew to the game from Florida or elsewhere. 

There was a temporary flying restriction in the area due to the presence of Air Force One, but when Trump did take off, Lakefront Airport managed to get safely get everyone else on their way, Martin told DailyMail.com. 

Regardless of the specifics, though, many were still horrified to see America’s wealthiest football fans dumping tons of carbon pollution across the country rather than sharing commercial flights with the mᴀsses.

‘How the 1% lives,’ one person wrote on X. ‘Must be nice. None of them should ever say a word about the environment.’

‘Eat the rich!’ added another. 

President Donald Trump boards Air Force One at Palm Beach Airport before Super Bowl LIX

President Donald Trump boards Air Force One at Palm Beach Airport before Super Bowl LIX

Carbon pollution from private jets has soared in the past five years, with most of those small planes spewing more heat-trapping carbon dioxide in about two hours of flying than the average person does in about a year, a November study found.

About a quarter million of the super wealthy — worth a total of $31 trillion —emitted 17.2 million tons (15.6 million metric tons) of carbon dioxide flying in private jets in 2023, according to the Nature journal Communications Earth & Environment. That’s about the same amount as the 67 million people who live in Tanzania,

Private jet emissions jumped 46 percent from 2019 to 2023, according to the European research team that calculated those figures by examining more than 18.6 million flights of about 26,000 airplanes over five years.

Only 1.8 percent of the carbon pollution from aviation is spewed by private jets and aviation as a whole is responsible for about 4 percent of the human-caused heat-trapping gases, the study said.

It may seem like a small amount, but it’s a matter of fairness and priorities, said the study’s lead author, Stefan Gossling, a transportation researcher at the business school of Sweden’s Linnaeus University.

‘The damage is done by those with a lot of money and the cost is borne by those with very little money,’ Gossling said.

The highest emitting private jet user that the team tracked — but did not identify by name — spewed 2,645 tons (2,400 metric tons) of carbon dioxide in plane use, Gossling said. That’s more than 500 times the global per person average of either 5.2 tons (4.7 metric tons) that the World Bank calculates or the 4.7 tons (4.3 metric tons) that the International Energy Agency figures and Gossling cites.

‘This report presents further proof that billionaires are causing the climate crisis,’ said Jonathan Westin, executive director of the advocacy organization Climate Organizing Hub. ‘They are clinging to their private jets and oil profits while regular people see increasing floods, hurricanes and wildfires.’

Earlier in 2024, the International Energy Agency calculated that the world’s top 1 percent of super-emitting people had carbon footprints more than 1,000 times bigger than the globe’s poorest 1 percent.

Gossling’s study counted more than 35,600 tons (32,300 metric tons) of carbon pollution from just five global events — 2022’s World Cup in Qatar, 2023’s World Economic Forum, 2023’s Super Bowl, the 2023 Cannes film festival and the 2023 United Nations climate negotiations in Dubai. That came from 3,500 private jet flights.

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