The Daily Telegraph

Pilots’ poor English skills putting passengers at risk

- By Sophie Jamieson

SAFETY on aeroplanes is being put at risk because of a poor standard of English among foreign pilots, a report has found.

Language proficienc­y is falling below the required internatio­nal standards and there are grounds to suspect some pilots are cheating in English tests, according to the independen­t research commission­ed by the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) and funded by the Department for Transport.

Rather than being examined, the report found some foreign language speakers had been granted certificat­es of English proficienc­y on “sweetheart” deals, through “handshakes” or “via friends”. The research found “alleged evidence of cheating”, whereby a candidate had passed the tests after just 10 days of studying – a “nearly impossible” achievemen­t.

Some pilots flying in UK airspace “appear to lack the minimum proficienc­y in English”, the report said, while air traffic controller­s outside Britain do not always have sufficient English to communicat­e with pilots even though they have been obliged to meet an industry standard since 2008.

It also recommende­d more language spot checks and making sure pilots and controller­s used proper terminolog­y rather than “plain language”.

The report looked at 267 incidents of miscommuni­cation, 89 of which occurred in the UK.

On one occasion, possible language difficulti­es were cited in a situation where a plane taxied onto the runway at a Midlands airport without clearance from the air traffic controller.

The Department for Transport said it was discussing the report with the CAA. The CAA told The Times it was studying the research and would work with the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on, which is responsibl­e for the tests and internatio­nal regulators.

The ICAO said it was developing tools to help with “proper oversight” of English language test providers.

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