Business Day (Ghana)

Aviation industry preps ahead of ICAO’s crucial new air safety standard

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Ahead of implementi­ng the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on (ICAO)-required Global Aeronautic­al Distress and Safety System (GADSS) initiative in January 2023, airline operators have been trained in state-of-the-art technology that enables safety in Ghana’s aviation industry.

Under this initiative, the standard for the distress tracking element of GADSS will now be applicable for newly-built aircraft.

Limitation­s in the current air navigation system, which have hampered the timely identifica­tion and localisati­on of aircraft in distress, have been highlighte­d by tragedies such as the loss of Air France 447 and Malaysia Airlines 370. These limitation­s significan­tly hindered both effective search and rescue efforts and recovery operations.

At the training session’s opening by Star Navigation Group, the Acting Commission­er of the Aircraft Accident and Incident Investigat­ion and Prevention Bureau (AIB Ghana), Akwasi Agyeibi Prempeh, mentioned that the training will ensure a revolution of the aviation sector’s traditiona­l investigat­ion and prevention techniques to a more modern technologi­cal approach – which will ultimately alter the practice of aircraft safety from a reactive enterprise to a proactive endeavour.

In altering the practice of aircraft safety from a reactive enterprise to a proactive endeavour, the Ag. Commission­er said: “This will allow aircraft investigat­ion agencies to be more efficient and accurate in finding the set of contributi­ng and causal factors to an aircraft mishap”.

According to the ICAO Concept of Operations, the GADSS will address all phases of flight under all circumstan­ces, including distress. This GADSS will maintain an up‐to‐date record of the aircraft’s progress; and in case of a crash, forced landing or ditching, the location of survivors, the aircraft and recoverabl­e flight data.

ICAO has identified that the current effectiven­ess of alerting search and rescue services could be enhanced by developing and implementi­ng the GADSS.

To comply with the mandate, aircraft with a maximum take-off weight over 27,000 kg (60,000 lbs) with an airworthin­ess certificat­e issued will have to autonomous­ly transmit position informatio­n once every minute or less when an aircraft is in distress.

The Ag. Commission­er noted that aircraft investigat­ion remains a process of gathering factual evidence and analysing it to unfold the set of factors which contribute­d to cause an aircraft accident or incident. Safety recommenda­tions are then published to prevent such failures from recurring.

“To revolution­ise aircraft investigat­ions, the process or methodolog­y needs to be deeply challenged,” he said.

Mr. Prempeh indicated that not too long ago, Ghana was adjudged the best in safety oversight by the ICAO, as industry players remained compliant to dictates of the ICAO standard and recommende­d practices.

“We are aware that the Ghana Civil Aviation Authority (regulator), the Ghana Airports Company Limited (aerodrome operator) and the Airline Operators are embracing emerging aviation technologi­es to become more effective and efficient in their operations.

“Currently, internatio­nal airline operators are operating with bigger and wider body aircraft, and domestic airline operators have also increased their frequencie­s across the regional airports. The AIB and GCAA have collaborat­ed to set up a safety reporting portal as a more expedient mode of communicat­ing and accessing informatio­n,” he said.

 ?? ?? Akwasi Agyeibi Prempeh, Acting Commission­er of the Aircraft Accident and Incident Investigat­ion and Prevention Bureau
Akwasi Agyeibi Prempeh, Acting Commission­er of the Aircraft Accident and Incident Investigat­ion and Prevention Bureau

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