Houston Chronicle Sunday

Grounded pilots out of practice sparking airline safety fears

- By Harry Suhartono and Anurag Kotoky

On Sept. 15, an Indonesian flight carrying 307 passengers and 11 crew to the northern city of Medan momentaril­y veered off the runway after landing, sparking an investigat­ion by the country’s transport safety regulator. It found the pilot had flown less than three hours in the previous 90 days. The first officer hadn’t flown at all since Feb. 1.

The incident underlines an emerging risk fromthe coronaviru­s pandemic: pilots aren’t getting enough opportunit­y to fly because airlines have grounded planes and scaled back operations due to a slump in demand for air travel.

In its preliminar­y report, Indonesia’s National Transporta­tion Safety Committee said the pandemic has made it harder to maintain pilot proficienc­y and flying experience. The Lion Air aircraft involved was an Airbus SE A330, one of 10 in the carrier’s fleet. Because Lion Air doesn’t have a simulator for the A330, its pilots are trained at third-party facilities in Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore. Covid-19 travel restrictio­ns havemade those harder to access.

“Regular flying keeps your mind in the cockpit,” said Mohan Ranganatha­n, an aviation safety consultant who was an adviser to India’s Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation. “Being away from flying for such a long time brings in some complacenc­y. Add loss of income, uncertaint­y about jobs or the future of the airline, that brings in additional stress. With an increase in stress levels, proficienc­y drops.”

Analytics company Cirium says almost a third of the world’s passenger jets remain in storage — parked in the center of Australia and the Mojave Desert in the U.S. While there’s been a recovery in domestic travel in larger markets such as China, internatio­nal traffic is way off pre-pandemic levels because of border restrictio­ns and mandatory quarantine, a big deterrent to travelers. Thousands of pilots have been laid off or furloughed, and those still in work are flying a lot less because there’s so little demand.

Pilot rustiness was also cited by Europe’s top aviation-safety official as a possible factor in the crash of a Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines Corp. plane in Karachi inMay that killed all but two of the 99 people on board. Nobody was injured in the Lion Air runway incident.

“The pilots did not seem to be as fluent in the way they were conducting their flights as they should have,” European Union Aviation Safety Agency Executive Director Patrick Ky said in September regarding the PIA flight. “If you haven’t flown for three months, six months, you need to be retrained in some way in order to come back.”

That concern is shared by others. At an event in October, Singapore’s central bank chief RaviMenon spoke about the lingering effect Covid-19 will have on the aviation industry and pilots who haven’t flown for long periods. “It’s not like picking up after taking two months off. When you take two years off, it’s very different,” he said.

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