Carriers which had passed the IATA operational safety audit were involved in five hull-loss accidents last year, but the accident rate for these operators was nevertheless three times better than for those outside of the scheme.
The accident rate was 1.14 per million flights for IOSA-registered airlines compared with 3.23 for non-IOSA operators.
IATA says that, over the five-year span from 2010-14, the rate was more than three times better – a figure of 1.48 against 4.99.
Over 400 airlines are IOSA-registered, and the scheme is compulsory for IATA membership.
IATA statistics for 2015 show there were 10 hull-loss accidents involving jets, none of which was fatal. Four of these involved IOSA carriers.
Director general Tony Tyler describes the period as an “extraordinarily safe year”, adding that the operational safety audit is “recognised as the gold standard” for such inspections. He says the association will “continue to tweak” the scheme to maintain its position.
The overall jet accident rate was 0.32, a slight deterioration on the previous year’s level of 0.27.
IATA says it has not counted the loss of the Germanwings or MetroJetAirbuses because they are suspected to have been caused by unlawful interference.
Eight hull-loss accidents involved turboprops. Four were fatal, and one of these involved an IOSA carrier.
IATA’s statistics shows the overall number of casualties, 136, was far fewer than the 2014 figure of 614 and the average of 504 over the previous five years.
Baltic Ground Services, an international provider of ground handling and aircraft fueling services, has expanded its cooperation with Turkish leisure carrier Freebird Airlines across several airports...
Affirming Cathay’ ongoing commitment to growing Hong Kong’s connectivity with Belt and Road countries, Cathay Pacific is pleased to announce plans to launch direct flights to Almaty,...
The A350-1000ULR (MSN 707), the first of 12 aircraft ordered by Qantas has completed its first flight in Toulouse, France. The aircraft, fitted with special flight test instrumentation, flew for three...
ExecuJet MRO Services Australasia is expanding its Falcon maintenance capability in Sydney, with new investments in specialist tooling, training and technical resources to support upcoming Falcon 7X h...