More than 225,000 flights were recorded on Wednesday, July 24 — more than ever recorded on a single day, according to the flight-tracking service Flightradar24.

While that could partly be attributed to increasingly comprehensive global tracking, air traffic is on a steady increase overall.

The figure excludes certain sensitive air traffic, including most military flights, so the number is likely higher.

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More than 225,000 flights took to the skies on Wednesday, July 24, more than ever recorded before.

Flightradar24, a real-time air-traffic-tracking service, tweeted that this was the first time since it began monitoring flights that it had tracked that many aircraft.

The figure represents virtually every trackable aircraft in the world that flew on Wednesday between midnight and 11:59 p.m. UTC, according to Ian Petchenik, who manages media and community relations for the company.

That includes everything from cargo planes and commercial passenger flights to helicopters, private jets, gliders, sight-seeing flights, and personal aircraft.

Flightradar24 tracks flights by combining data from several publicly available sources, including Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) transponder signals from aircraft, multilateration (MLAT) transponder calculation, and radar data. The tracking coverage — and consequently the 225,000 figure — excludes certain sensitive air traffic, including most military flights.

While it's theoretically possible that there have been days with more aircraft before Flightradar24 began tracking flights and recording data in 2006, Petchenik said, it seems unlikely since the number of aircraft active around the world has continuously increased. He also said that while an increase in total planes in the air is the main driver of the record-breaking figure, the fact that a higher proportion of aircraft are adopting ADS-B than ever before likely played a role as well.

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It's likely that the record will be broken at least a few more times this year, Petchenik said, maybe even this week. Late July and early August are typically the busiest periods for air traffic.

The 225,000 figure didn't indicate everything, like the number of passengers or amount of freight moved and the total distance flown.

Some Twitter users criticized increasing air travel as damaging to the environment and contributing to climate change. Commercial air travel accounts for 2 to 3% of man-made carbon emissions.