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Fixed capital and growth imperatives: Is commercial aviation trapped in a treadmill?

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  • Chevalier, Henri
  • Pineault, Eric

Abstract

Summary: Capital lock-in theory explains how investments in fixed assets create structural inertia in capitalist economies. In this article, we analyze the mechanisms of fixed capital investment to identify and illustrate four forms of lock-in within the commercial aviation industry—spanning aircraft manufacturers, airlines, fuel suppliers, and airports. These capital lock-ins compel firms to continually maintain, upgrade, and expand fixed assets, generating rising costs and requiring ever-higher production levels to sustain profitability. This dynamic produces a structural growth imperative, driving increasing financial and material flows throughout the aviation sector. We argue that this growth imperative anchors aviation within a fossil-fuel-based socio-metabolic regime. Roadmaps to make commercial aviation net-zero face major challenges, including the lack of time needed to mass-produce sustainable aviation fuels, the growing risks of biomass appropriation, and the persistent inability to decouple sectoral growth from greenhouse gas emissions. Consequently, demand-reduction strategies for aviation emissions will remain ineffective unless the supply-side growth imperatives embedded in the capitalist organization of the industry are addressed. The proposed framework also offers.

Suggested Citation

  • Chevalier, Henri & Pineault, Eric, 2026. "Fixed capital and growth imperatives: Is commercial aviation trapped in a treadmill?," Ecological Economics, Elsevier, vol. 240(C).
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:ecolec:v:240:y:2026:i:c:s0921800925003258
    DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2025.108842
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