Once in a great while, I have the
satisfaction of making a prediction or calling for a certain action in this
blog, and then seeing the called-for event actually come to pass. Last month, the International Civil
Aviation Organization (ICAO) issued a new set of tracking requirements for
airlines in participating countries, which means just about every airline that
flies in more than one country.
While a formal vote on the requirements won't happen till later in the
year, the slow-moving machinery of the United Nations—of which the ICAO is a
part—has finally creaked into action.
So it may not be too much to hope that the kind of situation that has
kept the destiny of Malaysia Flight 370 a mystery to this day can be avoided in
the future, or at least that such incidents will produce data that will make
the plane easier to find.
Flight 370, which disappeared a year ago March 8, was
supposed to stay within range of ground-based tracking radars. But when it veered way off course
toward the open ocean for reasons that are still unknown, the limited-range
ground radars lost contact with it, and an onboard satellite-tracking system
was not working, possibly because it was intentionally disabled. The upshot was that once the flight
disappeared, investigators had to use some arcane technical tricks to estimate
the flight's last known location, and the resulting poor accuracy and long gaps
between known locations have left searchers stuck with many thousands of square
miles of ocean to cover. The plane
may never be found.
Back in January, I blogged on this tragedy and noted that
the U. S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) was urging the Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) to adopt improved flight-location
technology. I also noted that
while this move would help us to find international flights operated by US
carriers, a truly international solution would have to await action by the
ICAO, which has now begun to act.
As reported in a recent Associated Press article, the ICAO
rules would require each airline to get location updates for all their flights
every 15 minutes. How they get the
updates is up to the airlines.
Deep-pocketed operations such as Air France already have automatic
satellite-location systems in place, and probably either already meet the
requirements or can change their operations slightly to comply. Less well-funded airlines can fall back
on having their pilots look at their pocket GPS they mail-ordered from Walmart
and use their shortwave radios to report their position. Any way will do, says the ICAO, but you
have to update your flight locations every 15 minutes. If the rules are approved, this
requirement will go into effect in 2016, which is by UN standards almost
instantaneously.
A second part of the ruling pertains to automatic
flight-location technology, typically a satellite link. By 2020, all new airplanes carrying
more than 19 passengers will have to go into a minute-by-minute location
transmission mode if an emergency occurs such as a steep dive or significant
deviation from the flight plan.
The five-year delay from now would give airframe manufacturers and their
customers time to ready the technology and the money to pay for it,
respectively.
By specifying in the 15-minute rule the desired outcome
rather than the technology required to achieve it, the ICAO has done a clever
thing. Each airline can tailor its
response to its own circumstances and adopt an approach that doesn't place an
undue burden either on the flight crew or on the airline's budget for new
equipment. For reasons that are
not clear, but may have to do with relationships between large avionics
companies and the federal government, FAA rules tend to be much more
prescriptive of exactly how certain goals are to be achieved
technologically. Historically, the
FAA owned and operated much of the technology itself, so naturally the agency got in the habit
of telling the airlines what matching equipment they needed. But nowadays, the central-control model
is pretty old-fashioned and is being superseded by distributed technologies
that rely upon a combination of public, private, and open-source resources to
work. Safety-critical technologies
are a breed apart, and a certain level of standardization and certification is
reasonable. But I wonder if things
might move a little faster in domestic aviation technology if the FAA took a
hint from the ICAO, and moved toward simply telling airlines what is to be
achieved, and let the firms themselves figure out how to achieve it.
All this comes too late to help those on the ill-fated
Flight 370, which is probably—but not for sure—somewhere at the bottom of the
Indian Ocean. The death of a loved
one is always a tragedy, but there must be a special pain associated with not
knowing anything about the person's final hours, and what mischance caused
their demise. Sooner or later,
someone will probably find the wreckage, and if enough evidence can be
recovered it may be possible to reconstruct what happened. But in the meantime, I hope that the
proposed new ICAO rules will make it much less likely that airlines will simply
lose track of a plane while someone runs off with it, and can even prevent such
incidents from occurring in the future.
Sources: The article "Airlines move to
better track their planes" by Scott Meyerowitz and David Koenig was
carried by numerous newspapers, including the Deseret News on Mar. 3, 2015 at http://www.deseretnews.com/article/765669470/Airlines-move-to-better-track-planes-a-year-after-Flight-370.html. My post "High Time for SatelliteTracking of All International Flights" appeared on Jan. 26, 2015.
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