Fra min observatør i de høyere luftlag, Byhaugen i Stavanger, har jeg fått denne. Det motsatte burde vært tilfelle i den type flyging med helikopter som kalles HEMS, som er ambulanseflyging. Her i Norge er det kun èn sertifisert flyger, men en medhjelper, som altså ikke er sertifisert, godkjennes nær sagt som flyger. I utlandet, spesielt USA, er det ingen medhjelper, kun èn flyger. Ulykkesstatistikken er ikke bra. To sertifisert flygere i Norge og alle andre steder er kravet satt av den internasjonale flygerorganisasjonen IFALPA gjeldende for kommersiell flyging med fly og helikoptre. For helikoptre er det unntak for aerial work.(Red)
Why airplanes might soon
have just one pilot
Jacopo Prisco, CNN • Published 13th
January 2022
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(CNN) — If you boarded
a passenger plane in 1950 and peeked into the cockpit, you would have seen five
people in there (almost certainly men): two pilots, a radio operator, a
navigator and a flight engineer.
Over the years, technical advances in radio
communications, navigation systems and on-board monitoring equipment gradually
removed the need for the last three, making it possible to safely fly a
passenger plane with just two pilots. That has been the norm in commercial
aviation for about 30 years.
Soon, however, things could streamline further,
and one of the two remaining pilots -- technically the first officer -- could
soon go, leaving behind only the captain. Many smaller and military aircraft
are already manned by a single pilot, but for commercial aviation this would
mean venturing into a brave new world.
A challenging
transition
"The transition from a two-pilot cockpit to a
single-pilot cockpit will be significantly more challenging than the transitions
from a five-person cockpit to a two-person cockpit," says a 2014 study on
single-pilot operations by NASA, which has done research on the subject for
well over a decade. According to the same study, a properly implemented switch
could "provide operating cost savings while maintaining a level of safety
no less than conventional two-pilot commercial operations."
But how do you safely get rid of one pilot? One
way is to greatly increase automation in the cockpit, devoting more tasks to
computers. Another is to offload the same tasks from the cockpit to the ground,
with the remaining pilot working as a member of a "distributed crew."
The latter approach seems more feasible, at least
in the short term, because much of what is required to implement it already exists.
"Technologically you could argue that in in a lot of cases we're already
there," says Patrick Smith, an airline pilot flying Boeing 767 aircraft
and the author of the popular book and blog "Ask the Pilot."
"But by doing that," he continues,
"you eliminate certain redundancies and I have a hard time with that,
because I fly aeroplanes for a living and even with two pilots in the cockpit
things can become extremely busy -- to the point of task saturation for both of
them."
The four-man crew of the Southern Cross monoplane study a map of their
route at Croydon airport in June 1930. Left to right: Australian aviator
Charles Kingsford Smith, co-pilot Evert Van Dyke, radio operator John Stannage
and navigator J. Patrick Saul.
Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Increased
workload
In one scenario, proposed by NASA, the remaining
pilot in the cockpit would be supported by a "super dispatcher" on
the ground, a trained pilot that could oversee a number of flights at once and
even fully control the plane remotely if needed, for example if the cockpit
pilot become incapacitated.
Another option is the "harbor pilot,"
also a trained pilot but specializing in a specific airport, who could offer
assistance with multiple planes arriving and departing from that airport.
NASA has conducted tests for these setups by
placing pilots from real crews in separate rooms, before presenting them with
difficult flight conditions on a Boeing 737 simulator.
All pilots were able to land their planes safely,
but the study showed "significant increases in workload" compared to
regular two-crew operations, resulting in "subjective assessments of
safety and performance being significantly degraded." Missing the visual
cues from the other pilot sometimes resulted in confusion or uncertainty about
which tasks had been completed or not.
Having only one pilot on board would save airlines
money, but only if the new ground operators and advanced automation doesn't end
up costing more, NASA says. Additional minor savings could come from smaller or
lighter cockpits in future aircraft.
Reduced crew
There's also another way to implement single-pilot
operations, but only on long-haul flights, which currently require a third pilot
that takes over when one of the other two is resting.
In this scenario, the third pilot would be removed
and the two remaining ones would operate normally during takeoff and landing,
but take alternating breaks during the cruise portion of the flight.
"In that case, you're going from two pilots
to one pilot in certain regimes of flight," says Smith. "But in the
other regimes of flight and when necessary, there would always still be at
least two pilots there. I'm open to that conversation -- I'm a lot more
amenable to that conversation than the idea of removing a pilot entirely."
A Cathay Pacific A350-1000 airplane.
Courtesy Cathay Pacific
Airbus and Cathay Pacific are already testing this
on the A350: "We are engaged in studies on operational patterns for flight
crew on long-range flights," an Airbus spokesperson confirmed to CNN.
"These studies are ongoing and based on a minimum of two operating crew
per flight. They are being undertaken in conjunction with the regulatory
authorities and airline partners." The goal is to certify the A350 for
this kind of operation over the next few years.
Cathay Pacific also confirmed its involvement as
"one of a number of airlines engaging with Airbus," a spokesperson
told CNN, and that "this is a long-term commitment to a project that is
still very much in its conceptual stage." They added that, even if the
concept is approved and introduced in the future, "all of the aircraft in
[Cathay Pacific's] existing fleet are certified to operate with a minimum of
two pilots on board and that there is no plan to reduce that number."
Pilot backlash
Airlines are accelerating on single-pilot
operations not just because it could save them money, but because of a looming
pilot shortage on the horizon.
Boeing predicts a need for 600,000 new pilots in
the next two decades, but by some estimates there will be a shortfall of at
least 34,000 pilots globally by 2025. Reducing the number of pilots on some
crews or aircraft could help mitigate the impact of this.
However, the group that will offer the strongest
opposition will likely be pilots themselves.
"That's because we're advocating on our
behalf to save our jobs, but also because we have a pretty good understanding
of how commercial aeroplanes operate and the vastness of the challenges
involved," says Smith.
The Airline Pilots Association, International
(ALPA), the largest airline pilot union in the world, released a paper in 2019
about the dangers of single-pilot operations. It called the idea
"premature" and based on "many costly and unproven
technologies," and stated that "the most vital safety feature in
transport-category aircraft now and for the foreseeable future [is] two
experienced, trained, and rested professional pilots in the cockpit."
The paper also says that no autonomous system can
compensate for an incapacitated pilot, and that there are many examples of
incidents where two pilots in the cockpit were needed to recover from equipment
malfunctions that otherwise would have likely resulted in disaster.
One such incident, often cited as a brilliant
example of cockpit collaboration, is the casualty-free 2009 Hudson river
landing of damaged US Airways Flight 1549 by Captain Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger and First Officer Jeff Skiles.
The 2015 Germanwings Flight 9525, during which the first officer locked himself in
the cockpit while the captain was on a bathroom break, then intentionally
crashed the plane into a mountain in an apparent suicide, is also often brought
up to highlight the risks of leaving a single individual at the controls of an
aircraft.
Would you?
Perhaps the biggest hurdle on the path to a single
pilot will be selling the idea to passengers. In 2019 Don Harris, a professor
of human factors at Coventry University in the UK, conducted a focus group and
survey on the prospect of flying on an airliner with just one pilot.
Just about 50% of participants said they'd be
willing to take that flight, and the general consensus was that removing a
pilot is "dangerous until proven safe." The three factors that
weighed the most in the participants' decision process were the state of the
pilot, trust in the technology and a combination of ticket price and airline
reputation, signaling that a significantly reduced fare would help sell the
idea. In the study, Harris concludes that the single-crew airliner is still probably
20 years away, but that legislative developments could make that a reality
sooner, albeit only for cargo aircraft.
Smith agrees: "Maybe there's room for
something like that further down the the aviation chain, small aeroplanes or
cargo operations, air taxi operations, charters. But implementing that at the
major airline level, that's a long way off."
According to Richard Aboulafia, an aviation
analyst at Teal Group, the move will take many more years, although it's
inevitable: "I don't think passenger perception is very important, but
establishing guaranteed and secure data links with ground stations is a must,
and of course an appropriate amount of time for regulators and insurance people
to get comfortable with this too."
Removing a pilot from the cockpit, however, will
help develop the very technology required for the next, and final, step:
removing human pilots altogether and fly planes remotely or autonomously. That,
however, sounds like an even more complicated conversation: "Two pilots to
one pilot is a major step," says Smith, "but one pilot to no pilots
is an immense one."
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