The reduction of its environmental footprint is crucial for aviation to achieve its own goals and, ultimately, meet the expectations of society and its customers, especially toward the Paris Agreement. The current discussion regarding measures toward that goal includes operational levers for reducing fuel consumption through improved procedures and the reduction of inefficiencies in the aviation system. One of these inefficiencies results from infrastructure capacity limitations, especially at airports. This paper builds on previous research on the integration of airport capacity limitations and their mitigation with an evolutionary fleet development model. Thus, it presents the effects of these mitigation strategies on air traffic fleets and networks and derives estimations of additional fuel consumption they might imply as compared to a use case without infrastructure limitations. In this context, we introduce a new modeling approach for describing changes to fleet-wide average flight distances in shifting traffic within Multi-Hub and Multiairport systems. We thus aim to contribute to the further discussion of operational fuel and emission saving potentials.