SITA has expanded its partnership with Safety Line, a start-up company
which helps pilots and airlines limit carbon dioxide (CO2)
emissions and operational costs by reducing an aircraft's fuel consumption at key
flight stages.
A flight can be roughly divided into three phases:
climb, cruise and descent. Safety Line, a young French company that specializes in predictive big data solutions for airlines and
airports, has made it its mission to help save aircraft fuel and
reduce CO2 emissions during all these flight phases with a
software suite called OptiFlight.
The focus currently lies on the
climb-out – the most fuel-consuming phase of a flight – and the
cruise phase.
Safety Line’s software solutions for the cruise phase, OptiSpeed,
OptiDirect and OptiLevel, collectively called OptiCruise, have
been integrated in SITA’s widely used eWAS Pilot mobile
application, which is part of SITA for Aircraft’s ‘Digital Day of
Operations’ portfolio.
eWAS Pilot, used by 50,000 pilots of
commercial airlines, business jets and cargo airlines, provides
4D weather forecasts and real-time updates from various
sources to warn about weather hazards such as thunderstorms,
lightning, clear air turbulence, strong winds, icing and even
volcanic ash.
Safety Line’s OptiCruise allows pilots and
airlines to achieve significant fuel savings and carbon emission
reductions. OptiSpeed shows pilots the fuel and time impact of
speed variations with the objective of on-time arrival at the best
fuel/time ratio while OptiDirect recommends shortcuts based on
historical flight data and indicates possible fuel and time
savings. OptiLevel advises pilots on the best initial flight level
and cruise level changes, taking tailwinds and headwinds into
account.
As part
of the new partnership and through the ‘Digital Day of Operations’
portfolio, SITA now also offers Safety Line’s OptiClimb software.
OptiClimb uses tail-specific machine learning performance models
in combination with 4D weather forecasts, to recommend customized
speed changes at different altitudes for each climb. The software
predicts fuel burn in tens of thousands of possible flight
scenarios and then issues recommended climb speeds to pilots ahead
of each flight.
Safety Line data shows that climb fuel
savings of 5-6% are possible for each flight without affecting
passenger safety or comfort. On a yearly basis, this could reduce
CO2 emissions by several thousands of tons and operational costs
by several million dollars, depending on the size of the airline
fleet. Safety Line estimates that 5.6 million tons of CO2 could be
avoided if all airlines in the world were to use OptiClimb.
Sébastien Fabre, CEO for SITA for Aircraft, said, “We
at SITA continue to seek smarter ways to use existing and new
technologies and collaborate with partners in the air transport
industry with the goal of making airline operations more efficient
and environmentally friendly. The partnership with Safety Line is
another important step for us that will enable airlines to embrace
the digital shift that is needed to reinvent the operation of
aircraft. It is about adopting more sustainable and cost-effective
practices.”
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