Dette minner meg litt om en sak fra 1983 da undertegnede skulle uttale seg om den såkalte HARP (Helicopter Airworthiness Requirements Panel) rapporten. Det viste seg at dersom en skulle følge alle anbefalinger, så ble det en robåt. Ser ut til at det går den veien nå også....
New North Sea Safety Rule
Squeezes Helicopter Capacity
Operators of helicopters in the UK
sector of the North Sea will soon have to provide extra safety equipment or be
forced to carry fewer passengers on each flight. Under new Civil Aviation Authority
(CAA) rules taking effect June 1, operators can carry passengers only in seats
immediately adjacent to emergency exit windows unless they install extra
flotation devices or improved emergency breathing systems (EBS). The UK’s
helicopter safety steering group estimates the new rule could reduce North Sea
fleet seating capacity by about 40 percent. The CAA is pressing operators to
provide Category A EBS units that can be deployed under water in “a time period
commensurate with likely breath hold time.” A critical issue, however, will be
to find suppliers for large quantities of the Category A equipment. Given the
overall seating capacity of the North Sea helicopter fleet, AIN estimates
the number of EBS units required could reach 2,000. A spokesperson with EBS
supplier Aqualung told AIN that delivering such a large number by June is
“doable but really tight.” The CAA itself believes implementing the measure may
take one to two years. Developing and retrofitting the required extra floats, to
be located on the upper fuselage, will take even longer.
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