The Sun (Malaysia)

Maintenanc­e staff shortage clips aviation industry’s wings

Manpower shortfall comes as global fleet of commercial aircraft is set to balloon a third by 2034

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NEW YORK: The United States is grappling with a shortage of maintenanc­e workers in the aviation industry, with baby boomers retiring and others changing jobs during the pandemic.

This comes as the global fleet of commercial aircraft is set to balloon a third by 2034, involving more than 36,400 planes, according to a recent study by consulting firm Oliver Wyman.

In its wake, spending in the maintenanc­e, repair and overhaul market is projected to grow almost 20% by 2034.

But the sector suffers from a shortfall of qualified manpower and an inadequate pipeline of talent.

It lacks some 24,000 aviation maintenanc­e technician­s in North America, a figure due to reach nearly 40,000 by 2028, Oliver Wyman notes.

This gap is not one that the renowned Aviation High School in Long Island will be able to fill with its cohorts totaling 2,000 students.

“I don’t think the Aviation High Schools have enough capacity to train enough people,” said Steven Jackson, principal of the Aviation High School in Long Island City.

“We are one of the largest high schools and it would be hard to scale it up further.”

The school is one of 28 certified by the US Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA), and trains future aviation maintenanc­e technician­s who can either enter the workforce after high school or further their studies in universiti­es.

“The job market is good and there is more money so, at the moment, more go straight to work than before,” Jackson told AFP.

In the United States, around 4,000 maintenanc­e, repair and overhaul companies employ some 185,000 aviation maintenanc­e technician­s and engineers.

This forms around 44% of the global total, according to the Aeronautic­al Repair Station Associatio­n.

“Working as a mechanic opens so many opportunit­ies,” said Fariha Rahman, 17, speaking to AFP at a JetBlue maintenanc­e hangar during a Career Discovery Week.

“I want to start in maintenanc­e, and work my way up,” the high school student added.

Another student, 15-year-old Gaby Moreno, added: “It’s such a great industry.”

“There are so many different jobs, so many benefits, and discounts for flights and other things, like insurance.”

AlixPartne­rs specialist Pascal Fabre stresses that the training of maintenanc­e technician­s

will need to be accelerate­d.

To boost the attractive­ness of aviation maintenanc­e, Congress passed legislatio­n in 2018 enabling the FAA to provide ad hoc grants.

As a result, US$13.5 million (RM64 million) was awarded this month to 32 schools, 20 of which would especially help with training maintenanc­e profession­als.

“Because so many aviation jobs are critical to operations, any ongoing shortage can eventually result in the industry’s growth being limited,” Oliver Wyman noted in an earlier report.

In a 2023 to 2042 outlook, aviation giant

Boeing forecasts “strong” long-term demand for newly qualified aviation personnel.

There is a need for some 690,000 new maintenanc­e technician­s to help maintain the global commercial fleet over the next 20 years, according to Boeing.

The maintenanc­e, repair and overhaul sector is “under-capacity, and hangar maintenanc­e slots are in high demand, especially as aircraft manufactur­ers’ delivery delays mean that older aircrafts are being flown for longer periods, requiring more maintenanc­e”, Fabre added.

The two major aircraft manufactur­ers, Boeing and Airbus, are fully booked until almost the end of the decade, and are accumulati­ng delays.

Meanwhile, airlines are stepping up orders as they seek to capitalise on strong demand from travellers and build fuel-efficient fleets.

“The pressure to produce and the retirement of many skilled baby boomers during Covid may also be contributi­ng to some of the quality-control issues plaguing the industry,” the Oliver Wyman report added.

According to experts, departures have led to the disruption of a transfer of know-how between experience­d and new technician­s.

Since last year, Boeing has suffered production problems and numerous incidents on its 737 MAX series, which prompted the FAA to launch an audit into its quality control.

In early January, an Alaska Airlines 737 MAX 9 suffered a blowout of a door plug while in flight.

Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun recently announced that he would step down by year-end, in a leadership shakeup as the company faces heavy scrutiny.

Previously, two fatal 737 MAX crashes – one in 2018 and one in 2019 – led to a nearly two-year grounding of the aircraft.

Beyond manufactur­ers, United Airlines is also in the crosshairs of the FAA, which is reviewing its safety procedures after several recent incidents.

 ?? AFPPIC ?? Employees of Jet Blue airline working on an engine of an Airbus A320 passenger aircraft in a maintenanc­e hangar of the company at JFK Internatio­nal Airport in New York. –
AFPPIC Employees of Jet Blue airline working on an engine of an Airbus A320 passenger aircraft in a maintenanc­e hangar of the company at JFK Internatio­nal Airport in New York. –

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