IATA has reported its aviation safety
performance data for 2009 showing that the year’s accident rate
for Western-built jet aircraft as the second lowest in aviation
history.
The 2009 global accident rate (measured in hull losses
per million flights of Western-built jet aircraft) was 0.71. That
is equal to one accident for every 1.4 million flights. This is a
significant improvement of the 0.81 rate recorded in 2008 (one
accident for 1.2 million flights). The 2009 rate was the second
lowest in aviation history, just above the 2006 rate of 0.65.
Compared to 10 years ago, the accident rate has been cut 36% from
the rate recorded in 2000.
In absolute numbers, 2009 saw
the following results:
- 2.3 billion people flew safely on 35
million flights (27 million jet, 8 million turboprop) - 19
accidents involving western built jet aircraft compared to 22 in
2008 - 90 accidents (all aircraft types, Eastern and Western
built) compared to 109 in 2008 - 18 fatal accidents (all
aircraft types) compared to 23 in 2008 - 685 fatalities compared
to 502 in 2008
“Safety is the industry’s number one priority.
Even in a decade during which airlines lost an average of US$5
billion per year, we still managed to improve our safety record.
Last year, 2.3 billion people flew safely. But every fatality is a
human tragedy that reminds us of the ultimate goal of zero
accidents and zero fatalities,” said Giovanni Bisignani, IATA’s
Director General and CEO.
IATA member airlines outperformed
the industry average with a Western-built jet hull accident rate
of 0.62. That rate is equal to one accident for every 1.6 million
flights. “In 2009 IATA marked an important milestone in aviation
safety. From 1 April, all IATA members were on the registry of the
IATA Operational Safety Audit - a testimony to our commitment to
the highest global standards for operational safety. IOSA is the
global standard. Today 332 carriers are on the registry, including
IATA’s 231 members,” Bisignani added.
There are significant
regional differences in the accident rate.
North Asia,
Latin America and the Caribbean as well as the Commonwealth of
Independent States (CIS) had zero western-built jet hull losses in
2009.
- North America (0.41) and Europe (0.45) performed better
than the global average of 0.71
- Asia Pacific’s accident rate
worsened to 0.86 in 2009 (compared to 0.58 in 2008) with three
accidents involving carriers from the region.
- The Middle East and North Africa region saw
its accident rate rise to 3.32 (compared to 1.89 in 2008) with
four accidents involving carriers from the region.
- Africa had an accident rate of 9.94,
significantly higher than their 2008 rate of 2.12. Africa has once
again the worst rate of the world. There were five Western-built
jet hull losses with African carriers in 2009. African carriers
are 2% of global traffic, but 26% of global western-built jet hull
losses.
An analysis of the causes of the 2009 accidents
focuses on three main areas:
Runway excursions continue to
be a challenge and accounted for 26% of all accidents in 2009.
However, the total number of runway excursions dropped by 18% (23 vs 28 in 2008). IATA released its Runway Excursion Risk Reduction
Toolkit in 2009, with an updated version to be produced later this
year. The toolkit is incorporated with IATA’s broad ranging safety
data tools in the IATA Global Safety Information Center (GSIC), a
customizable website which will enable users to extract relevant
safety information through a single application and enable them to
perform performance benchmark and conduct trend analysis and risk
management.
Ground damage accounted for 10% of all accidents
in 2009. To improve safety and reduce this US$4 billion annual
industry cost, IATA introduced the IATA Safety Audit for Ground
Operations (ISAGO). Built on similar principles to IOSA, ISAGO is
the industry’s first global standard for the oversight and
auditing of ground handling companies. The first audits took place
in 2008. To date a total of 149 audits have been conducted.
While runway excursions and ground damage were the main categories
of accidents, pilot handling was noted as a contributing factor in 30% of all accidents. IATA’s Training & Qualification Initiative
(ITQI) is pushing for harmonizing a competency-based approach
focused on training real skills while addressing threats presented
by accident/incident reports and flight data collection and
reporting. IATA will also work through ICAO to develop a Fatigue
Risk Management System as part of the Safety Management System.
This will be a new process to systematically manage crew fatigue
taking into account changes in aircraft capabilities and airline
operations.
These initiatives are consistent with IATA’s
comprehensive Six-point Safety Program which focuses on
infrastructure safety, safety data management and analysis,
operations, Safety Management Systems, maintenance and auditing.
“Safety is a constant challenge. Having made aviation the
safest way to travel, further improvements will come only with
careful data analysis. We must understand the underlying safety
risk trends, not just from the handful of accidents each year, but
by bringing together and analyzing data from millions of safe
flights. The IATA Global Safety Information Center was launched in
December 2009 for just that purpose. Going forward our goal is to
work with other organizations and governments involved in aviation
safety to add to the database and drive even more improvements,”
Bisignani said.
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