Japan aiming to counter expected pilot shortages around
2030
The Japanese government, airlines and academia are
trying to boost the pool of future pilots to cope with expected manpower
shortages that could cut flight services.
Concern is growing as the large
number of pilots now in their late 40s, who were recruited during Japan's
asset-inflated bubble economy in the late 1980s and early 1990s and make up a
big portion of working pilots, will be retiring around 2030.
As highly
specialized pilots cannot be trained immediately, the country is trying to
secure more personnel by boosting the quota of training schools and setting up a
loan scheme for students eager to become pilots.
As part of such
measures, ANA Holdings Inc., the parent of ALL Nippon Airways Co., offered a
lesson at an elementary school in Tokyo in October with a pilot, cabin
attendants and maintenance engineers introducing their professions.
The
company plans to hold similar classes in all of Japan's 47 prefectures by
2020.
Japan Airlines Co., in collaboration with the University of Tokyo,
has also organized a seminar for junior high and high school students in which
the movements of aircraft wings are simulated by computer.
"We want
(students) to develop a wide interest" in the aviation industry, an official in
charge of the program said.
The airline industry, which has seen
increasing demand, could face serious personnel shortages in Japan when pilots
in their late 40s retire. For midsize or low-cost carriers that cannot train
pilots themselves, labor shortages are particularly serious.
Airdo Co., a
carrier based in Hokkaido, was forced to cancel flights and close some routes
from November this year due to a lack of captains following their
retirement.
About 300 people are recruited each year as potential pilots
by domestic airlines but to cope with future labor shortages the number needs to
be raised to 400 around 2030, experts say.
To cope with the situation,
Civil Aviation College, set up in southwestern Japan's Miyazaki Prefecture by
the state, plans to boost its student quota by 1.5 times to 108 in the next
academic year from April, while Kogakuin University in Tokyo will establish an
aviation major to train pilots.
As tuition fees at pilot training schools
could exceed 20 million yen ($176,000), a student loan program offering up to 5
million yen will also begin in the next academic year for students at six
private institutions. Part of the loan guarantee fees will be covered by JAL and
ANA.
The government is also tapping the older generation who have worked
as pilots. In 2015, Japan raised the age limit at which a pilot can continue to
work after official retirement at 60, the current age set by JAL and ANA, from
64 to 67.
An official at the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport
and Tourism said, "It is vital to support the whole (industry) by taking
measures in various fields."
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