List view / Grid view

Air traffic control/management (ATC/ATM)

 

News & articles from International Airport Review covering Air Traffic Control and Air Traffic management (ATC/ATM)

article

NATS delivers world-first in virtual control towers

29 September 2009 | By Des McKeon, Commercial Director, NATS Services Ltd

NATS has achieved a breakthrough in airport control contingency by putting into service the world's first full safety certified back-up virtual operations room. The Virtual Contingency Facility (VCF) was developed following discussions with BAA and the airlines, who wanted to improve Heathrow's resilience.

article

En route air traffic optimisation to reduce environmental impact

26 May 2009 | By Adan E. Vela, Senay Solak, John-Paul B. Clarke, William E. Singhose

Air traffic delays due to congestion in the National Airspace System (NAS) are a source of unnecessary cost to airlines, passengers, and air transportation dependent businesses. Congestion is estimated to cost the aviation industry, passengers, and shippers approximately $10 billion per year. This cost can be further segregated into a…

article

Working with partners and customers to achieve environmental targets

30 September 2008 | By Carrie Harris, Head of Air Traffic Management Environment, NATS

Carrie Harris is the Head of Air Traffic Management Environment at NATS, the UK’s leading air navigation services provider. NATS provides air traffic control services to aircraft flying in UK airspace and over the eastern part of the North Atlantic...

article

FAB Europe Central enters a new phase

1 August 2008 | By Daniel Weder

22 July 2008; The air navigation service providers (ANSPs) and the civil aviation and military authorities of the six States Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Switzerland have carried out a detailed feasibility study on the creation of a so-called Functional Airspace Block (FAB). The study shows that a…

article

Change and challenge in European Air Traffic Management

30 May 2008 | By David McMillan, Director General, EUROCONTROL

It might be a truism, but change is gradually changing. This can be seen in the accelerating rate that new inventions are adopted wide-scale. The World Bank recently conducted a study into this and found that in the past, it took a long time before new technology was adopted.

article

ICAO language proficiency requirements

30 May 2008 | By Mrs Nicole Barrette-Sabourin, Project Manager for Language Proficiency Requirements, ICAO

On 5 March 2008, new ICAO language proficiency requirements came into effect for pilots and air traffic controllers involved in international flight operations. They deal with the ability to speak and understand the language used for radiotelephony communications at Operational Level 4. At the ICAO Assembly in September 2007, a…

article

Copenhagen’s new tower: advanced solutions to exceptional challenges

4 February 2008 | By Morten Dambæk, Director General, Naviair

When in 1716, the Danish Empress Katharina drove up to the top of the Round Tower at Copenhagen’s Trinitatis church in a horse-drawn carriage with her husband Peter the Great, she set a certain precedent in remarkable tower transport operations. But 291 years later the tradition has been maintained, when…

article

Runway bottleneck optimising the optimum

3 April 2007 | By Dieter Kaden, Chairman and Chief Executive Office and Ralph Riedle, Director Operations, DFS Deutsche Flugsicherung GmbH

Delays in air traffic have a great variety of causes that are often aggravated by knock-on effects due to the individual process structure of a flight. Furthermore, it is the weakest link in the aviation chain that determines the success of the overall system. This is most evident in the…

article

Single European Sky (SES) objectives in sight

3 April 2007 | By Mr. Bernard Martens, Chairman of FAB Europe Steering Group

In 2006, six countries – Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Switzerland – undertook to take a step closer towards the Single European Sky objectives and to closely cooperate to enhance air traffic management in the core area of Europe. The "Functional Airspace Block (FAB) Europe Central" feasibility study,…

article

Modernising the U.S. ATC system

6 February 2007 | By Basil J. Barimo, Vice President Operations and Safety, Air Transport Association of America

If the U.S. air traffic control (ATC) system is not fundamentally reformed to handle the projected rapid growth in the number of aircraft using the services of the system, the U.S. aviation industry and all of its stakeholders, including our nation’s airports, will face an unparalleled confluence of challenges with…

article

Automating ATM: “Stripless” earns its spurs

1 December 2006 | By Alain Rossier, Chief Executive Officer, skyguide

Skyguide, Switzerland’s air navigation service provider, has achieved tangible improvements in both working comfort and ATC capacity since it adopted its new “stripless” air traffic management system in December 2005. To date, experience of the new system has been highly positive; the controllers’ enthusiasm for their new work-tool is a…

article

ATM training at Entry Point North

1 December 2006 | By Anne Kathrine Jensen, Managing Director, Entry Point North AB – Nordic ATS Academy

Entry Point North AB – Nordic ATS Academy – is the outcome of a constructive partnership between the Air Navigation Service Providers in Scandinavia: Avinor AS in Norway, LFV Group in Sweden and Naviair in Denmark. The academy was officially opened in March 2006 and welcomed the first students from…

article

AIM service provision in the light of SES

17 March 2006 | By Raimund Fridrich, Head of Corporate Publishing, Skyguide

The term Aeronautical Information Management (AIM) is relatively new and covers not only the former Aeronautical Information Service (AIS) but also MET and other geospacial aviation data (e.g. Airport data). Its role and the services it offers are already changing significantly. In the future, AIM will be fully based on…

article

Cooperating on ATM research

16 September 2005 | By Hans Offerman, Chairman EATRADA European Air Traffic Management Research and Development Association

The most effective way of researching new technologies needed to enhance capacity is to work together writes Hans Offerman, chairman of a new European association with cooperative aims.

article

Congestion and slot allocation

16 September 2005 | By Claus Ulrich, Chairman of the Worldwide Airport Coordinators Group (WWACG)

Co-ordinating and allocating flights may traditionally be a back-room activity, but current capacity constraints mean that it is rapidly coming to the fore.