1 / 13

ACI Apron Safety Survey Issues, Discussion, Solutions

ACI Apron Safety Survey Issues, Discussion, Solutions. Apron Safety Survey: Past Results. According to ACI statistics the number of incidents have been going down…. Source: ACI Statistics 1983 - 2005. In fact, the number of respondents has gone down. Apron Safety Survey: Response over time.

rumor
Download Presentation

ACI Apron Safety Survey Issues, Discussion, Solutions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ACI Apron Safety SurveyIssues, Discussion, Solutions

  2. Apron Safety Survey:Past Results According to ACI statistics the number of incidents have been going down… Source: ACI Statistics 1983 - 2005 In fact, the number of respondents has gone down

  3. Apron Safety Survey:Response over time Responding Airport Year of survey

  4. 2005 Apron Safety Survey:Response breakdown Percentage change 2004 – 2005: - 1 %

  5. 2005 Apron Safety Survey:November data Total number of accidents/incidents: 244 Percentage change 2004-2005 Type of accident/Incident Number of occurrences 102 71 31 76 (+34%) 65 (+9%) 11 (+181%) Involving aircraft Damage to stationary aircraft Caused by/to moving aircraft Involving equipment/facilities Caused by Jet Blast Equipment to equipment damage Equipment to facilities damage Injuries to PAX and Personnel Minor Severe Fatal Total Spills Fuel Other 198 (-28%) 2 (+100%) 131 (-36%) 65 (-17%) 142 4 84 54 132 127 5 0 204 (-32%) 203 (-37%) 1 (+400%) 0 311 143 168 355 (-12%) 190 (-25%) 145 (+16%)

  6. 2005 Apron Safety Survey:Full year data Total number of accidents/incidents: 2,742 Percentage change 2004-2005 Type of accident/Incident Number of occurrences 846 660 186 922 (-8%) 660 (0 %) 262 (-29%) Involving aircraft Damage to stationary aircraft Caused by/to moving aircraft Involving equipment/facilities Caused by Jet Blast Equipment to equipment damage Equipment to facilities damage Injuries to PAX and Personnel Minor Severe Fatal Total Spills Fuel Other 2,311 (-18%) 32 (+81%) 1,412 (-20%) 867 (-19%) 1,896 58 1,136 703 2,090 2,051 37 2 1,807 (+16%) 1,780 (+15%) 22 (+68%) 5 (-60%) 3,611 1,753 1,855 2,830 (+28%) 1,123 (+56%) 1,707 (+9 %)

  7. 2005 Apron Safety Survey:Change 2004 - 2005 2005 saw a decline in most figures: - Number of airports responding: - 1 % (187 → 185) - Number of incidents/accidents: - November 2005: - 11 % (274 → 244) - Full year 2005: - 15 % (3,233 → 2,742) A decrease in incidents/accidents can be deducted: - Average percentage change: - November 2005: - 17.5% - Full year 2005: + 7.2%

  8. Apron Safety Survey:Proposed changes • Re-define the ACI Apron Safety Survey: • Reliable, accurate statistics • Show the “real picture” of apron safety • Improve reporting methods • New Survey: • Focus on long standing reporting airports (year on year) • Reduce number of airports responding but increase quality of data • Collaborate closely with the regional offices for data collection • New Survey Breakdown: • Target 100 specific airports • Multiple airports from each ACI region • Specific number of small/medium/large (traffic) Comparison of a the same airports year on year will make the trends identified more accurate

  9. Apron Safety Survey:Airports responding over time (2003 - 2005)

  10. Apron Safety Survey:Trend sample (2003 - 2005) Overall Accidents/Incidents

  11. Apron Safety Survey:Trend sample (2003 - 2005)

  12. Apron Safety Survey:Trend sample (2003 - 2005) Damage to/by moving aircraft by year

  13. The voice of the world’s airports

More Related