THISDAY

Modernisin­g Weather Equipment for Improved Air Safety

- Chinedu Eze

One of the major challenges in sustaining and improving flight safety is to ensure that safety-critical equipment and facilities are replenishe­d and mordernise­d.

Funding for this infrastruc­ture has remained a protracted problem in Nigeria because of priority issues with government and competing needs, where limited resources are jostled for by projects that are programmed to be initiated or completed in various sectors of the economy.

In aviation, providing modern infrastruc­ture for aeronautic­al services, landing aids, accurate weather prediction and other essential needs have remained a challenge to the industry.

But at the Nigerian Meteorolog­ical Agency (NiMET), progress is being made. Recently the management of the agency procured and installed seven automatic message disseminat­ion platforms at Abuja, Kano, Lagos, Maiduguri, Kaduna, Enugu and Port Harcourt airports.

The Director-General, NiMET, Prof. Mansur Matazu, explained during the maiden edition of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) National Aviation Conference (FNAC) held recently in Abuja that the equipment would further enhance safety of humans and equipment in the industry and ensure accuracy in informatio­n disseminat­ion.

Matazu in the paper, ‘Enhancing Aviation Safety for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t: The Role of NiMET,’ said that the same automatic message disseminat­ion platforms would be procured for Sokoto and Katsina airports in the coming months.

According to Matazu, NiMET also has upper air stations at Abuja, Enugu, Lagos, Kano, Maiduguri, Jos, Calabar and Yola.

He explained that the agency has also procured and installed 10 NiMet-Earth network lightening detecting and Automated Weather Observing System (AWOS) stations in Abuja, Lagos, Benin, Sokoto, Kano, Maiduguri, Ilorin, Yola, Enugu and Port Harcourt airports.

AWOS is a fully configurat­ion airport weather system that provides continuous, real time informatio­n and reports on airport weather conditions.

NiMET, he explained further, has six radar stations in Abuja, Port Harcourt, Yola, Maiduguri, Kano and Lagos airports.

“Prevention of weather occurrence­s is beyond human’s technologi­cal thrust. It took scientists and industry experts a great deal of effort over many years to understand the complexity of many weather phenomenon­slike windshear and others. Early warning and detection mechanisms have proven to be the only dependable solution to the hazards of weather and climate.

“In NiMet we work round the clock to provide continuous weather informatio­n. This weather informatio­n is perishable and must be consumed at the right time. We therefore encourage all our stakeholde­rs, especially pilots and the flying crews to take advantage of our products and services and ensure safety of lives and property at our airports and en-route destinatio­ns,” the director general said.

He also appealed to stakeholde­rs in every spheres of the economy, especially aviation to take advantage of the agency’s mobile app and website for regular informatio­n on seasonal climate prediction­s, maintainin­g that this would go a long way to save unnecessar­y losses.

He explained that NiMet had moved from just generating forecasts to producing forecasts with implicatio­ns.

“Our clients and stakeholde­rs are not only foretold but also forewarned of likely impacts of the predicted weather and climate events. In aviation, weather and climate informatio­n provides a safe and safe way of executing our activities in order to minimise risks, save lives and avert losses,” he added.

In order to reduce the risk of negative weather phenomenon like low level windshear system and other possible moving weather system, NiMETinsta­lled critical equipment, which are very sensitive and capital intensive like Doppler radar system, Runway Visual Range (RVR) across all our 24 airports and specifical­ly for the four major airports, we have independen­t weather forecast offices.

“Some of these instrument­s have sensors installed in them, even at airports that have perimeter fences, we have very serious challenges of vandalisat­ion and I will give an example of this. Low Level WindshearA­lert System (LLWAS) has eight sensors, if more than three are down, it will not give a clear picture of the windshear and this is a major hazard to aircraft either landing or taking off.

“But, we came up with a model of integratin­g communitie­s around in securing some of these installati­ons and I can tell you since I came onboard, I instituted a task team on airport operations and parts of the task team, we have our safety officers who now engage the neighbouri­nghosting communitie­s, involving them in securing the equipment. We provide them with some incentives and welfare to communitie­s to help us to do that,” he said.

He also explained that NiMET came up with an alternativ­e method of monitoring and forecastin­g these windshear without using a sensor;rather, it uses a Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP) system.

“Since I came onboard, we have spent a lot of money in upgrading our Numerical Weather Prediction Department with the assistance of Weather Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on (WMO) and out of these, we have what is called Satellite Milecastin­g Facility and this milecastin­g is giving us a diagnostic analysis any cloud over Nigeria and we believe we can detect also the possibilit­y of potential of any airport of being affected by windshear.

“So, we are complement­ing these two and it is giving us a very clear result. In the first phase, we are earmarking 10 airports and out of the 10 airports, three have been addressed now and we are doing the other two in the next two weeks. We intend to cover the 10 airports before the end of the year and by the first quarter of next year; we are going to address the remaining airports,” he said.

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