Is Air Safety Less Safe in the Asia Pacific Region?
The
perception of air safety in the Asia Pacific region continued to take a hit
after the February 2 crash of TransAsia Airways Flight 235, flown with an
ATR-72-600, into Taiwan's Huandong Viaduct. Experts interviewed by
AirwaysNews.com feel that the region, which is experiencing a rapid growth in
airlines, has put its air safety record in the spotlight.
A TransAsia ATR-72 taking off from Kaohsiung.
Image: Courtesy of Michel Teiten / Wikipedia
Anthony
Brickhouse is an associate professor of applied aviation sciences at
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, Florida. He has worked
for the NTSB in the Vehicle Performance Division of Office of Research and
Engineering in Washington, D.C., and is a member of International Society of Air
Safety Investigators (ISASI).
Brickhouse emphasized that before looking
at the region's overall air safety record, it's important to step back and look
at the accidents that have happened in the past year. "The majority of those
accidents that happened in the region are still being investigated. They're
still looking for Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370, while it appears that MH17
was brought down outside the realm of a safety-related accident," he said. "So
before we can make a final assessment, we need to know the links that are
causing these accidents in the region."
Anthony Roman is the president of
Lynbrook, New York-based Roman & Associates, a global investigation and
security risk management firm. He's an FAA-licensed commercial pilot, a former
corporate pilot and a former adjunct instructor at the State University of New
York's professional pilot program.
"The Asia Pacific region's airlines
have had an unprecedented accident record, with 12 fatal accidents in 14-month
period," said Roman. "That's unacceptable, given the engineering built into
modern airliners that help prevent accidents from happening.
"Things like
policies and procedures and administering airlines' enforcement of proper
maintenance rules, safety procedures and other kinds of administrative actions
are needed to maintain a healthy and safe airline," said Roman.
Aviation
government authorities in the Asia Pacific region are under each country's
sovereignty, said Roman. "And each are part of the global commercial aviation
community that must comply with ICAO regulations on air safety," he said. "Take
Malaysia Airlines, had been under a watch order, where they were being monitored
to ensure they reached air safety compliance. ICAO has been giving them a
helping hand during rapid expansion that dovetailed with the airline's rapid
growth to meet demand in the region."
Brickhouse noted that the Asia
Pacific region has experienced a tremendous amount of growth in the past 10
years, which can present challenges for these newer airlines. "I'll use the U.S.
airlines as an example. If you go back in history to the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s,
we had periods where there were fatal accidents," he said. "The aviation
industry was outgrowing the regulations and safety procedures that were already
in place."
An accident would happen, and more procedures would be put in,
said Brickhouse. "So it's important that regulations and safety procedures that
are already in place grow in lock step with an airline industry that's growing.
When the regulatory and safety sides lag, it presents opportunities for
accidents to happen," he stated.
National and low-cost carriers are
springing up all over the Asia Pacific region, said Roman. "If budget airlines
aren't carefully managed, the words budget and safety can conflict. It's far
easier for them to conflict, and this is delicate balance occurring in the Asia
Pacific region now," he said. "You have the mix of rapidly expanding airlines,
new routes and burgeoning growth happening faster than enforcement of policies
and procedures can keep up."
While a focus on safety and business success
can be at odds, Western carriers have mastered that formula, while Asia Pacific
airlines have not, said Roman. "Those airlines need a better risk management
program that focuses on the management of safety. They need to follow ICAO
regulations that manage the implementation of safety training," he said. "So
until they have risk management programs that are successful, they will continue
to suffer far greater accident rates than Western airlines."
Brickhouse
noted that while on the surface, the region looks to be unsafe, it's hard to
make general assessments. "Instead, we need to learn from accidents. What we can
focus on when an accident happens is to answer three questions: what happened,
why it happened and what can we do to prevent it from happening again," he said.
Abonner på:
Legg inn kommentarer (Atom)
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.