AERODROME CERTIFICATION: Key to Safe and Efficient Aerodrome Operations
The INTERNATIONAL CIVIL AVIATION Network,
carries over four billion passengers around the world annually.
In celebrating ICAO's
75th Anniversary Celebrations, we will be highlighting some of the crucial
safety achievements that have enabled this.
We hope you follow our UnitingAviation.com series throughout the year, and we encourage
you to use the #ICAO75 hashtag to
share your thoughts and memories with us through social media.
EVERY FLIGHT STARTS AND
ENDS, AT AN AERODROME.
From their humble beginnings as relatively simple
landing strips, international aerodromes have evolved into highly complex
facilities.
A modern international aerodrome’s environment is
characterized by vast areas, distinct airside (movement area) and landside areas, sophisticated technologies,
dozens of square kilometres of runways, taxiways, aprons, service areas, a
multitude of equipment and integrated systems, and the growing activity of
third parties.
Added to all of this, today’s aerodromes are
facing, more than ever, increasing commercial pressures with greater public
awareness and expectations on safety and efficiency issues.
ICAO long-term traffic forecasts indicate that
global passenger traffic will almost double by 2032, reaching more than 6
billion passengers annually –compared to
3.5 billion in 2016– and there will be more than 60 million flights.
As the number of aerodromes serving international
operations is not expected to increase significantly (and certainly will not correlate with the forecast growth in passenger
volume and aircraft movements), there is a need for ensuring the
sustainable accommodation of this unprecedented growth, while maintaining
safety and regularity of operations.
Aerodrome certification has been a requirement in ICAO Annex 14 –Aerodromes, Volume I– Aerodrome
Design and Operations since 2001.
It is a proven and effective way of ensuring safe
and efficient aerodrome operations, through a defined encompassing process
which examines various components of the aerodrome, with an aim
to verifying their compliance with international Standards and Recommended
Practices (SARPs).
ICAO sets forth an array of provisions that encompass the whole
lifecycle of the aerodrome certification process, from the establishment of a
dedicated mechanism, to the planning of a certification project and its execution.
These include, first and foremost, Annex 14, Volume
I which sets the basic, high-level requirements in this area; the
PANS-Aerodromes –Procedures for Air Navigation Services– Aerodromes (Doc 9981), which details a thorough
global procedure for aerodrome certification; and
the Manual on Certification of Aerodromes (Doc
9774) which provides guidance material supporting the SARPs and the PANS procedures.
Furthermore, these 3 main documents are also
supported by more than 20 other manuals which provide further guidance on
specific subsets related to the aerodrome certification process, including,
among others, aerodrome planning, design, rescue and firefighting, wildlife
management, visual aids, obstacles control and more.
During a thorough
certification process, aerodrome regulators
and operators verify that the aerodrome’s facilities, design, equipment and
operational procedures comply with relevant SARPs, thereby ensuring safe operations and supporting optimization
of aerodrome capacity and efficiency.
According to Annex 14,
Volume I, States shall certify the
international aerodromes in the areas under their jurisdiction, through an
established mechanism.
The certification process is outlined in
the PANS-Aerodromes (Doc
9981).
Generally, it starts with a submission, by the
aerodrome operator, of a formal application to the national authority
responsible for civil aviation, which includes basic information on the
aerodrome operator (to whom the
certification will be granted in the end of a successful certification process),
the aerodrome itself and its facilities, and the intended operations.
It continues with a thorough review by the
authority of the aerodrome manual, the key document submitted by the aerodrome
operator, which details the day-to-day
procedures for the operation of the aerodrome, as well as information
pertaining to its planning and design.
The process is followed by technical inspections
and on-site verification by the authority of the aerodrome facilities and
operational procedures, including its safety management system, in order
to complete the analysis and ensure compliance with applicable provisions, as
well as the appropriateness of operating procedures.
The process ends with the granting of the aerodrome
certification, which may include details on specific operations-related
features or limitations arising from the certification process, information on
major facilities, and the validity of the certificate.
Of particular importance is the conduct, as part of
the certification process, of compatibility
studies and safety
assessments as outlined in the PANS-Aerodromes,
in order to address operational issues in a sustainable way, to facilitate the
accommodation of new larger or more demanding aircrafts by the aerodrome, and
to develop operational procedures and operating restrictions, if needed.
ICAO provides ongoing support to Member States in the area of aerodrome certification.
This assistance is aimed at capacity building and
implementing aerodrome certification worldwide, and primarily includes
assistance to States in transposing ICAO provisions into their national
regulations, conducting gap analyses, and addressing operational issues
revealed in the certification process.
This carried out through continuous dialogue with
States, direct support by ICAO Regional Offices, the organization
and delivery of regional workshop and seminars on aerodrome certification and
operations, and also the implementation of aerodrome certification projects by ICAO’s Technical Cooperation Bureau
(TCB).
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