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Qantas Fatigue Risk Management Plan Approved For 20 Hour Plus
Flights
Qantas has just signed off on a fatigue risk management
system (FRMS) that helps pave the way for the proposed ultra-long-range Project
Sunrise flights.
Qantas has a new FRMS that covers 20+ flights but
not Project Sunrise flights. Photo: Qantas News Room.
The latest
FRMS was given the thumbs up by Australia's aviation safety regulator, CASA,
following a 12-month trial. While the new FRMS allows for flights in excess of
the current 20-hour ceiling, Project Sunrise flights will still need to be
approved on a route by route basis.
However, a Qantas spokesperson told
Simple Flying that this FRMS is an important regulatory step in advance of
Project Sunrise.
A calm and steely airline CEO
The clock is
ticking for Qantas. Their self-imposed deadline for announcing whether Project
Sunrise would go-ahead is the end of March.
If Qantas boss, Alan Joyce is
feeling any pressure, he isn't showing it. As the deadline approaches, Mr. Joyce
and his team are going onto the front foot to clear the last obstacles out of
their way.
On the other hand, the Qantas pilots union, the Australian
International Pilots Association (AIPA), must be feeling some
pressure.
Negotiations between Qantas and AIPA continue over a pay deal
with ultra-long-range flights. This pay deal will incorporate agreement and
acceptance of matters such as FRMS. The negotiations have gone on for some time
and have been characterized by their acrimony.
Qantas CEO Alan Joyce has warned he will bring in
new pilots to operate Project Sunrise flights if AIPA doesn't come to the party.
Photo: Qantas News Room.
While CASA said they had taken into account
AIPA's concerns in approving the latest FRMS, AIPA had a limited role to play in
the approvals process.
This FRMS is unusual in that it was put together
by Qantas, rather than Qantas adopting a template model from CASA. However, CASA
did oversee and audit the entire process.
AIPA not happy at being
sidelined
The relative sidelining of the AIPA hasn't impressed them. AIPA
President Mark Sedgewick said;
"This is a clear breach of the regulator's
legal and safety responsibilities, according to advice from the International
Civil Aviation Organisation, which states that pilots must be involved at all
stages of an FRMS implementation.
"AIPA is concerned that Qantas is
fast-tracking the establishment of an FRMS in order to allow certainty over an
investment decision for the delivery of its A350 aircraft order.
"This
has the potential to undermine safety and threaten Qantas' reputation."
A
classic Alan Joyce move
The sidelining of AIPA is a classic Alan Joyce
maneuver. Done and dusted, thanks for coming. In recent weeks, Alan Joyce has
ratcheted up the pressure on AIPA by suggesting Qantas could recruit a fresh
pool of pilots if a pay deal couldn't be brokered.
It wasn't management's
preferred course of action, Qantas International CEO Tino La Spina said in
February, but it was a live option. Anyone who is familiar with Mr. Joyce's
history of negotiation with unions would agree the fuse is probably already
burning on this one.
On matters IR, Alan Joyce's key lieutenant at
Jetstar, Gareth Evans, has sidestepped his ground crew's union, the Transport
Workers Union, by putting a proposed enterprise bargaining agreement directly to
employees. The employees voted to accept the offer. That's another union put
down by the Qantas group - temporarily at least.
A lot of pilots happy to
head home
The coronavirus outbreak might be impacting Qantas' bottom line,
but it is also releasing thousands of pilots onto the employment market. Many of
the pilots now flying for the largely idle Chinese mega carriers were trained
and sourced from western airlines like Qantas.
There are a lot of highly trained and
underutilized pilots on the market right now. Photo: Qantas News
Room.
Apparently, quite a few of them would be happy to call Sydney
home and to take a paycheck from Qantas once again.
While the clock is
ticking for Qantas, the stars are also aligning for it. With its bete noire,
AIPA, on the backfoot, Qantas can push through the changes it needs - with or
without AIPA's assistance and approval. According to its half-yearly investor
notes released last week, barring these last few hiccups, the airline is locked
and loaded and ready to call Airbus to confirm those A350s.
An
announcement is due by the end of the month. Qantas will probably spring it a
week or two early. They do that regularly. Flights are due to commence in 2023.
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