The European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) and the
International Air Transport Association (IATA) announced an agreement on
sharing of safety information and joint analysis of safety trends. These
analyses primarily will be based on the information derived from the Safety
Assessment of Foreign Aircraft (SAFA) program, and the IATA Operational Safety
Audit (IOSA).
EASA and IATA expect that this collaboration will provide
an excellent basis for better identifying important safety issues and has the
potential for further improvements to the auditing process including the Third
Country Operators (TCO) assessments and authorization requirements of the
European Union.
”Safety is aviation’s highest priority and IOSA is the
global benchmark for airline operational safety management. Working together
through this information and trend-sharing partnership will contribute to
making aviation even safer, while offering the potential to optimize the audit
processes,” said Tony Tyler, IATA Director General and CEO.
Partick Ky, EASA Executive Director, said: “Partnering
with IATA on data sharing is a major stepping stone towards our common goal to
promote the highest possible level of safety in aviation. This close and
pragmatic relationship with industry will in particular facilitate the
demonstration of compliance to the new rules affecting non-European Union
airlines”.
IOSA is a requirement of membership in IATA; additionally
some 150 airlines that are not members of IATA participate in IOSA. SAFA ramp
inspections are random safety inspections on a given aircraft and its crew,
focusing on the flight preparation and the technical condition of the aircraft.
Approximately 11,000 inspections are recorded every year.
No comments:
Post a Comment