Passenger planes to report position every 15 minutes under new UN
tracking plan
The United Nations aviation agency will propose a new standard that
requires commercial aircraft to report their position every 15 minutes as part
of a global tracking initiative in the aftermath of the disappearance of a
Malaysian jetliner.
The loss of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 last March sparked a global
drive for a system that would make it possible to pinpoint the exact route and
last location of an aircraft.
An International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) spokesman said on
Tuesday that the standard, if adopted, could go into effect in the near term
because it would not require new technology on planes.
ICAO members are set to discuss the proposal at a major safety conference
in Montreal next month.
Airline industry group International Air Transport Association (IATA)
promised to lead an industry task force last year on the issue and to
voluntarily improve tracking while ICAO developed its standard.
In December, that industry task force recommended that airlines start
tracking planes in at least 15 minute intervals within 12 months, but IATA
itself balked, saying the deadline was not practical.
ICAO spokesman Anthony Philbin called the ICAO scheme a "foundational
flight tracking standard." The agency is developing more stringent tracking
recommendations.
Advertisement "If (member states) agree to the standard, the safety
conference will also be asked how quickly it expects it to be implemented and if
it would want ICAO to expedite that process," Philbin told Reuters via email.
"Once our states have made their views known in that regard, we'll have a better
idea of the time frame."
ICAO could effectively force airlines to act because the standards it sets
typically become regulatory requirements in its 191 member states. But the
agency prefers to make decisions by consensus, making February's conference
crucial.
Many airlines already track their planes using satellite systems. An ICAO
working paper recently noted that the majority of long-haul aircraft already
have systems on board that can transmit their position.
But it noted that the equipment is not always turned on and that in some
locations, including along polar routes, there are gaps in satellite
coverage.
Asked if radio could be used to meet the draft standard, ICAO's Philbin
said voice communication could serve as a fallback for planes that do not have
newer technology.
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First Air the only airline in the world with black box data
streaming
Technology that could have solved the mystery of the disappearance of
Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 is currently used by only one airline in the
world: First Air, which flies in the Canadian Arctic.
The system, made by Calgary tech company FLYHT Aerospace Solutions, has
been around for about five years.
"First Air was the first to say, 'We want the whole deal because our crews
and our passengers fly in a very difficult part of the world,'" says Matt
Bradley, president of FLYHT Aerospace Solutions.
The system has two parts.
- The Automated Flight Information Reporting System, or AFIRS, is a blue
box about the size of a briefcase that's located in the electrical system of an
aircraft. The box monitors flight paths, fuel and engine levels.
- The FLYHTStream, which streams data from an aircraft to the ground in
real time. The data streaming is automatically triggered when the AFIRS detects
a predefined abnormal event, and can also be turned on by the flight crew or by
ground personnel.
More than 400 airplanes from 40 different airlines use the reporting
system to monitor fuel and engine levels. But only First Air uses the system in
tandem with the streaming system.
'Not a revenue driver'
The airline has had the reporting system in its planes for three years,
and it brought in the data-streaming system in May 2014.
"It's not a revenue driver," says Bradley. "It doesn't make the airline
money like a business class seat or an extra baggage fee. It costs
money."
First Air spent about $1.8 million to install AFIRS in its 18 aircraft,
and the data-streaming system costs it an additional $22,000 a year.
Installing AFIRS on an aircraft costs $120,000. The data-streaming system
costs an additional $100 per month per plane.
"In aviation terms, it's really not that expensive," says Vic Charlebois,
First Air's vice-president of flight operations.
For an airline that connects most of the communities in Nunavut, from
Resolute Bay in Nunavut's High Arctic to Cambridge Bay on the western edge of
the Northwest Passage, it's essential.
"Up in the High Arctic, there is no radar," Charlebois. "It is very
difficult to communicate with aircraft. To add to the safety monitoring of the
aircraft, to have the black box data streamed to the ground and have an accurate
position should something happen to our aircraft was just the natural evolution
and growth of the product and what we wanted out of it."
Black box use limited
Commercial flights have black boxes that record all flight data and
communication, but that information can only be accessed after the box is
recovered.
Most planes now have technology that sends out their location. However,
some technology only works with radar, and radar coverage is sparse in remote
areas, like in the Canadian Arctic or over oceans.
Other systems aren't able to pinpoint exactly where an aircraft might have
gone down, instead giving a search area thousands of kilometres
wide.
The recent crash of AirAsia Flight QZ8501 and last year's disappearance of
of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 have highlighted some of these
issues.
"I think the general public feels that when they get on an aircraft,
they're tracked, everybody knows where they are at all times and that we have
the same kind of systems on an aircraft that we expect from our cell phone
connectivity," Bradley says.
"As we realize from these incidents, that's just not true."
Industry must act
Both Bradley and Charlebois say the aviation industry moves slowly when it
comes to new technology. New systems have to be vigorously vetted and sometimes
airlines have to wait years before each company's engineers approve the
installation of new technology.
But Canadian aviation analyst Robert Kokonis says that has to
change.
"The industry really needs to get their act together here," he
says.
"With the FLYHT streaming, in the case of the Malaysia aircraft, it would
have automatically started to stream the black box data. We would have known
what happened to the aircraft and where it actually went down."
Bradley says FLYHT Aerospace Solutions has received a number of inquiries
about the streaming technology since the AirAsia plane crash last month.
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