FlightCom_March 2015
Transcription
FlightCom_March 2015
%"! !%$%%$" #$("&%#!!$ (!'! !$(#!# '/!/$1+%/0,$ 1&# &'%.2)'16 2')11,)01 ##/#!1!,2+1/64'"#+"#5-,/1$2))&+%/('10 1&/,2%&,21$/'!+"4,/)"4'"# &+%/'+!)2"'+%",,/0#5$!1,/6 55 5 5 55 )),1&#/0'7#0*"#1,,/"#/ ))&+%/0/#!,*-)#1#4'1& #+%'+##/0"/4'+%+"!#/1'$'!1# 1+,#51/!,01 ,+1!120+,4 #)|+1|5 *')01#3#0*01/2!12/#0!,* # 4440*01/2!12/#0!,* SA Flyer 2014| 06 0'!&+%/-/'!#4'1&!),0#" 0'"#0+"",,/0#/#!1#",21&$/'! #5!)2"'+%1/+0-,/1 55 5 5 55 )),1&#/0'7#0*"#1,,/"#/ '0!,2+1$,/14,,/*,/#+%/0 1(#+11�*#1'*# 0'!'101/2!12/#0$,/!,*-)#1# March 2015 Edition 78 "/1!).!,).%*)' %,+*,. %,'%)!-%&!*/#$ 4 6 /-$%'*./#$,2*, 10 '%#$.$**' 14 0%.%*) 18 !"!)! 20 ,,!)'%0%!, -')- !))%-)&!'*1 !.%,!- ).!,0%!1 26 32 %*!3/% !)$*/. 40 -$&*-$ 48 0%.%*)%,!.*,2 46 Ed's note... E THOPIAN Airlines is the poster-boy for what can be achieved by airlines in Africa. And for those who insist on private ownership of airlines, Ethiopian remains resolutely state owned. Ethiopian has taken full advantage of its geographical position as a hub for north Africa by pushing ahead with its aggressive network and fleet expansion in 2015. COPA reports that Ethiopian has already become the largest airline in Africa based on fleet size and could overtake South African Airways (SAA) in 2015 as the largest based on passengers carried. Ethiopian has doubled in size since the beginning of the decade while most other major African carriers have grown only slightly or not at all. Ethiopian Airlines carried 6 million passengers in the 2014 financial year, making it one of only four airlines in Africa with over 5 million annual passengers. It is also one of only four airline groups with a fleet of more than 50 aircraft. Passenger traffic reached 6 million in 2014 fuelled by 15% growth. Notably the other three African airlines that have at least 5 million annual passengers have recorded virtually zero growth over the past six years. SAA carried about 7.1 million passengers in 2014, maintaining its position as market leader in Africa based on passengers carried. But SAA traffic is below its 2008 levels, when it carried 7.4 million passengers. (SAA traffic shrunk in 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012 but grew slightly in 2013 and 2014.) EgyptAir also carried an estimated 7 million passengers in 2014. The airline’s traffic level reached a pre-Egyptian crisis high of 7.3 million in 2010. Back in 2008 EgyptAir transported 6.8 million passengers. Royal Air Maroc (RAM) carried about 6 million passengers in 2014, roughly matching the Moroccan flag carrier’s figures from 2008 and 2011. (RAM traffic shrunk in 2012 and 2013 as it restructured but grew again in 2014.) As EgyptAir and SAA are both restructuring in 2015, their traffic levels will probably drop below 7 million. RAM is again expanding but not as ambitiously as Ethiopian. As a result Ethiopian could soon become the only African airline with 7 or more million annual passengers – if not in 2015, then almost certainly in 2016. This is a remarkable achievement given that SAA carried three times as many passengers as Ethiopian in 2008. EgyptAir and RAM were also more than double the size of Ethiopian in 2008. But perhaps the best comparison is between Ethiopian and its closest rival, Kenya Airways. COPA reports that Kenya Airways was slightly larger than Ethiopian in 2008, when it carried 2.8 million passengers. Kenya Airways transported 3.7 million passengers in 2014. Its average annual growth rate has been only about 5% since 2008. This makes the almost 300 percent growth of Ethiopian all the more impressive. Guy Leitch Editor '2!,) 0%.%*)/'%.%*)- /2!%.$ #/2 "'%#$.*((#*( 2)!%'-*) 12)! -"'2!,(#*3 (%'2)!%))!, 70 Address 301 Bryanston Drive, Bryanston, 2021 P O Box 71052 Bryanston, 2021 South Africa Tel +27 (0)11 463 1573 Fax +27 (0)11 463 1812 " ! !!! !! ! Airports ZAMBIA’S MFUWE INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT Mfuwe International Airport is Zambia’s smallest and most remote international airport. It serves the Eastern Province’s Luangwa Game Park, a well-known wildlife sanctuary. D ESPITE its name, Mfuwe International Airport does not have international scheduled flights, but is serviced by the major domestic player, Proflight Zambia, which uses British Aerospace 19-seater J32 and 29-seater J41 Jetstreams. Proflight has signed interline agreements with Emirates Airlines, Ethiopian Airlines, Kenyan Airways and Precision Air for flights to Mfuwe International Airport and other local destinations. In May 2014, Proflight’s interline agreements were extended to low-cost operator, fastjet, originating from Tanzania. The new interline agreement with fastjet will offer seamless air travel on the two airlines’ destinations in Zambia and Tanzania. Commenting on the interline agreement in the Proflight Zambia in-flight magazine, Nkwazi, managing director, Tony Irwin, said: “With the fastjet interline, it will give passengers originating in Tanzania the opportunity to connect to any Proflight Proflight operates a 29-seater British Aerospace J41 Jetstream into Mfuwe International Airport. destination and will give Proflight passengers originating in Zambia the opportunity to connect to any of fastjet’s Tanzanian destinations.” Proflight does not have interline agreements with the international airlines from South Africa, namely South African Airways and Airlink. However, it has timed its flights in such a way that travellers have seamless progressions to and from Mfuwe International Airport. I recently flew to Mfuwe in a Proflight 19-seater British Aerospace J32 Jetstream and noticed the high level of activity of small private and charter aircraft. Mfuwe is ideal for light planes, which accommodate passengers when traffic levels are low and are great for tourists, who are treated to aerial views of the animals in the game reserves and the luxuriant scenery of the Luangwa River. Mfuwe International Airport was constructed in the mid-1970s, mainly to serve South Luangwa Game Park. It was conferred with the status of international airport in 1995. The three other airports with international status in Zambia are Kenneth Kaunda International Airport (formerly Lusaka International Airport), Harry Mwaanga Nkumbula International Airport (formerly Livingstone International Airport) and Simon Mwansa Kapwepwe Airport (Ndola International Airport). Like the other three international airports, Mfuwe is managed by the Zambia Airports Corporation Limited (ZACL), a state-run corporation mandated to collect landing fees, be responsible for the collection of taxes from major airports and provide navigational services, provision of infrastructure and fire and rescue services. Since being established in the mid-1970s, the game reserve has attracted tourists from all over the world. It is located on a trade route that the Portuguese established between Tete in Mozambique and Lake Mweru on the border with the Democratic Republic of Congo in the 1800s. In spite of its small size, Mfuwe International Airport has a Titan 4x4 E-One fire (foam) tender that can handle bigger aircraft such the DC-8, and locally owned Air Mafuta provides Jet A1 fuel and Avgas to schedules and charter planes. This is supplied from cargo containers on the apron. Banking services, including ATMs, are provided by the Zambia National Commercial Bank and Barclays inside the small terminal building. Luggage is conveyed manually into and out of the terminal. Since the airport is serviced by light planes, it is not a very big task for Zambia Airports Corporation Limited (ZACL) staff to deal with luggage on trolleys. Mfuwe International Airport in Zambia was constructed in the mid-1970s, mainly to serve South Luangwa Game Park. Mfuwe is ideal for light planes. They accommodate passengers when traffic levels are low and are great for tourists wanting to see Luangwa from above. Flights from Mfuwe provide great views of the Luangwa River. FUTURE EXPANSIONS Six years ago, the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) carried out an audit on Zambian aviation regulations and raised safety concerns. Aircraft originating from Zambia were banned from landing in the European Union following the audit. The Zambian government has since sought US$900 million from co-operating partners to upgrade the country’s four international airports, including Mfuwe. Out of the US$900 million, the government, through the ZACL, has reserved US$139 million for airport upgrades at Mfuwe. Those upgrades will include a new terminal, a hotel and 85 housing units on the eastern side of the airport. Airport development and investment in real estate have been combined due to the seasonality of animal viewing in the South Luangwa Game Park. When the grass is tall during the rainy season from April to December, there are few aircraft that fly to Mfuwe International Airport because animals are obscured by the tall grass. This reduces revenue in terms of landing fees and airport charges, hence the mixed investment strategy. Other future airport developments will include the extension of the 2,200 m x 30 m asphalt-surfaced runway by another 1,000 m. Mfuwe, like other international airports, will also have an aeronautical message handling system, information management system, new communication radios and automated weather stations. Future developments at Mfuwe Airport are justified owing to the ever increasing number of passengers. The highest annual growth was 13.1% in 2012 when the number of passengers increased to 23,587 from 20,848 in 2011. Mfuwe’s smallest growth rate in terms of passengers was 0.3% in 2011. In that year, the number of passengers increased marginally by 71 passengers to 20,848 from the 2010 figure of 20,777. In the past half a decade, it was only in 2009 that the number of passengers at Mfuwe International dropped below 20,000. The airport recorded an average above 2,000 passengers per month in 2013 when the number of travellers shot to 24,880. Those 2013 numbers were boosted by the UN World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO) General Assembly that Zambia jointly co-hosted with Zimbabwe from August 24 to 29. Mfuwe may be Zambia’s smallest and most remote international airport, but the wildlife sanctuary will continue to attract visitors from all over the world for years to come. Þ Airline Ops MIKE GOUGH Further Evidence The aviation sector is unique. Where else can one use a highly publicised event to illustrate a point, and then the industry obligingly serves up yet another dramatic accident to continue the discussion on aircrew fallibility? T WO serious accidents in less than two months – both seemingly triggered by failures that were simply not handled at all appropriately by their respective crewmembers. Let’s consider the latest accident – the ATR72 crash in Taipei. Thanks to widespread use of cameras and recording equipment in our technologydriven lives, we have ample this aircraft. For all intents and purposes, it appeared to be in an irrecoverable state from the moment it appeared between the buildings to when it struck the highway bridge. What should the crew have been focusing on – the management of the threat or error that produced this scenario, or the management of the undesired aircraft state that resulted from the threat/error event? With the limited information released to date, a full and detailed analysis of all the causal events will have to wait. However, the facts that have been released so far make for an absolutely classic study-case of Threat and Error Management (TEM) followed by an Undesired Aircraft State (UAS). To recap, TEM is an evolution of the acknowledgement that human factors are a major source of incidents and accidents. Prior to 1985, just about all crew training focused almost exclusively on the technical aspects of operating the aircraft @ ? watershed in crew training, and had a less than luke-warm reception by most airlines and crews. Pilots considered themselves to be tough and were not meant to allow emotions and self-analysis into the cockpit. Of course emotions and personalities have always been present and it was a case of getting them channelled in a safe direction. About 15 years later, after The ill-fated ATR72-600 was operated by a carrier that has IATA membership, so this tragedy will become a feature of the database to assist training. deck, engine starting, takeoff performance calculations, rejected take-offs and so-on ? regime. In the late ‘80s, the basics of human factors emerged in the G (Crew Resource Management), *, ! placed all responsibility on the crew. In its day, it was a a few evolutions of CRM, the obvious became apparent – pilots are not the only ones in , ? As we all know, we now have Human Factors to consider, of which CRM and TEM are components. Evidence Based Training (EBT) is our present frontier to master, which encapsulates all these concepts and produces training scenarios based on real-life events that ' displayed by the operator or crew. As mentioned in last month’s column, there are 95 IATA airlines that contribute to the constantly growing STEADES database of events that are available to member airlines as points from which to develop training scenarios. The ill-fated ATR72-600 was operated by a carrier that has IATA membership, and thus this tragedy will become a permanent feature of the database, available to create suitable training interventions. As an aside, I love the use of these terms which actually convey a fairly simple notion, but sound oh-so important. # ? K To start from what may or may not be the beginning of this chain of events that resulted in the aircraft ending upsidedown in a river, let’s consider what is known, and how our growing knowledge of TEM and EBT can work with us as crew and instructors. This much we know: • This operator has had two fatal accidents in the past year, both with the newly-delivered ATR72-600s. This is a ‘glass’ cockpit, latest iteration of the popular ATR series. The crew transitioned to this latest version through one simulator session. This is from a personal source who operates as a Type Rating Instructor (TRI) in the region. • The accident aircraft was less than a year old, but for some reason required major maintenance on both engines only days prior to the accident. • 2 ? +! %- + , He was called back from leave as the airline had no First A' * Preliminary FDR (Flight Data Recorder) data has been placed in the public domain, which, in broad terms, indicates the following: • After a normal take-off, the number 2 (left hand) engine ‘rolled back’ to idle power, causing the propeller to Autofeather, which means it placed itself in the least-drag ! 2 exactly as per design. This engine runs at idle until impact. • The number 1 engine has its power lever (throttle, in simple terms) retarded by 10 degrees initially, then all the way back, triggering its own fuel shut-off valve. This counters the automatic up-trim of the engine, which is an increase in power to counter the self-detected loss of power from the left. • $*9?!% crew attempt to re-start it. This, I can only imagine, is the result of what must be that completely frantic realisation that they had shut down the wrong engine. The gut-wrenching feeling of impending doom that must have • prevailed in those last few seconds can only have added to the procedural confusion as they desperately tried to rectify their fatal mistake. There, but for the grace of God, go I. Can we remember the two main ‘groups’ of threats from our Threat and Error Management training? The guys I asked at yesterday’s simulator session also battled … Overt and Latent. Overt being those mountains around Blantyre or that huge thunderstorm painting on the radar. Latent being that incorrectly ! 2 Control – just as general examples. So these guys started off with a couple of Latent Threats. The 5 all done correctly? Maybe not, considering number 2 went to uncommanded idle. ?, A which had to cut his leave short to go back to work to help out the / A +!, their lack of planning on crew strengths. This will, possibly, make ,+ ' *+ even read. A third one, which sits squarely with the company, was the very short transition training onto the new instrumentation of the -600. I have visions of the Kegworth 737 accident when the crew shut down the wrong engine due to lack of familiarity with new instruments. Were these threats briefed on? Unlikely. Latent threats, are by ', ! ,'), hindsight on this one. The point is, they existed and it appears that they manifested themselves in the accident sequence. Airline Ops MIKE GOUGH The overt threats were probably those that we brief on daily – busy airport operations, weather, distractions and soon. As we do it regularly, we tend to pay a certain amount of ‘lip-service’ to the process. On the other hand, we cannot reel off every conceivable potential issue as we would never get off the ground. It is * who can come up with the most potential problems. this step, it is impossible to mitigate the effects of any crew-committed mistake. This accident is an extreme example of what goes wrong with an un-trapped error. Did the crew realise their mistake? Yes, I believe so, as the incorrectly shut down engine was in the process of re-lighting. Why was the most basic of all engine failure procedures incorrectly carried out? +,% ? deck had something to do with that, plus 80% of all routine flights show crew errors of one sort or another. So those were some of the threats. Were they adequately managed? I don’t think so. What of the errors? Probably a few happened as a matter of course, as the STEADES database indicates that 80% of ? sort or another. A scary statistic indeed, but a clear indication that we have to be able to manage errors. This can only happen if the errors are @ referred to as ‘trapping’ the error. Without TransAsia crew did one simulator session to transition onto the new glass cockpit in the ATR72-600, possibly compounding the threats. the dynamic of two Commanders trying to work together in an absolute pressurecooker environment of an aircraft that ,?, When we have all the details and the ! ' * laid bare for our dissection, and ultimately incorporated into our training programmes through EBT. Similarly, so will the demise of the AirAsia A320 of two months ago @ for public consumption. I would venture that their tardiness in this regard could be considered a latent threat in itself, from an organisational perspective. In terms of this A320 accident, what can go so wrong with a FAC (Flight Augmentation Computer) reset that causes the aircraft to auger into the sea? That’s all the information we seem to have at present, and it leaves more questions than answers right now. I have done a FAC reset in anger, and seem to still be around to tell the tale. It does, however, make me consider the overhead panel where that reset switch is with a 5 I can see a scenario being developed in the future for the simulator with some of those events incorporated – until we get the info, however, it will remain a latent threat. / , ! pieces of the puzzle into the TEM and EBT + * % mystifying the new methodology. It will be most interesting to see if we ** reduced un-trapped errors as a result of such a shift in training. Þ