Aviation Ghana

EASA partners with IATA to counter aviation safety threat from GNSS spoofing and jamming

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The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) and the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) announced the conclusion­s of a workshop jointly hosted at EASA’s headquarte­rs to combat incidents of GNSS spoofing and jamming. The workshop’s high-level conclusion was that interferen­ce with satellite-based services that provide informatio­n on the precise position of an aircraft can pose significan­t challenges to aviation safety. Mitigating these risks requires short-, medium- and long-term measures, beginning with the sharing of incident informatio­n and remedies. “GNSS systems offer tremendous advantages to aviation in increasing the safety of operations in a busy shared airspace,” said EASA Acting Executive Director Luc Tytgat. “But we have seen a sharp rise in attacks on these systems, which poses a safety risk. EASA is tackling the risk specific to these new technologi­es. We immediatel­y need to ensure that pilots and crews can identify the risks and know how to react and land safely. In the medium term, we will need to adapt the certificat­ion requiremen­ts of the navigation and landing systems. For the longer term, we need to ensure we are involved in the design of future satellite navigation systems. Countering this risk is a priority for the Agency.” “Airlines are seeing a significan­t rise in incidents of GNSS interferen­ce. To counter this, we need coordinate­d collection and sharing of GNSS safety data; universal procedural GNSS incident guidance from aircraft manufactur­ers; a commitment from states to retain traditiona­l navigation systems as backup in cases where GNSS are spoofed or jammed. In actioning these items, the support and resources of EASA and other government­al authoritie­s are essential. And airlines will be critical partners. And whatever actions are taken, they must be the focal point of the solution as they are the front line facing the risk,” said Willie Walsh, IATA’s Director General. Measures agreed by the workshop to make Positionin­g, Navigation and Timing (PNT) services provided by GNSS more resilient, include: Reporting and sharing of GNSS interferen­ce event data. In Europe, this would occur through the European Occurrence Reporting scheme and EASA’s Data4Safet­y programme. As this is a global problem, it is important, for a better and complete understand­ing, to join all the informatio­n available from reports by connecting the databases such as IATA’s Flight Data Exchange (FDX), or EUROCONTRO­L’s EVAIR. This topic will be included in the discussion­s among all interested stakeholde­rs, which will be launched following this workshop. Guidance from aircraft manufactur­ers. This will ensure that aircraft operators are well equipped to manage jamming and spoofing situations, in alignment with EASA’s Safety Informatio­n Bulletin (SIB 2022-02 R2). Alerting: EASA will inform the relevant stakeholde­rs (airlines, air navigation service providers (ANSPs), manufactur­ing industry and airports) about attacks. Backup: Aviation must retain a Minimum Operationa­l Network (MON) of traditiona­l navigation aids to ensure that there is a convention­al backup for GNSS navigation. Background on ‘spoofing’ and ‘jamming’ In very recent years, Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) jamming and spoofing incidents have increasing­ly threatened the integrity of Positionin­g, Navigation, and Timing (PNT) services across Eastern Europe and the Middle East. Similar incidents have been reported in other locations globally. GNSS is a service based on satellite constellat­ions such as the US Global Positionin­g System (GPS) and EU’s Galileo. ‘Jamming’ blocks a signal, whereas ‘spoofing’ sends false informatio­n to the receiver on board the aircraft. These disruption­s pose significan­t challenges to the broader spectrum of industries which rely on precise geolocatio­n services, including aviation. Such attacks belong to the domain of Cybersecur­ity, safety threat for which EASA has developed a toolkit. The National Aviation Authoritie­s (NAAs) in Europe had explicitly tasked EASA with taking measures to counter this risk. About the workshop Participan­ts in the workshop shared informatio­n on actual events experience­d, to deepen the collective understand­ing of the perceived threat. There was wide appreciati­on from the attendees for the event and a shared understand­ing of the need to tackle this issue collective­ly in a timely fashion. Over 120 participan­ts from airlines, manufactur­ers, system suppliers, ANSPs and institutio­ns joined the in-person event, which was held in Cologne on January 25, 2024.

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