1 / 32

Safety case development in ATM R&D

Safety case development in ATM R&D. Safety feedback for decision-makers and concept developers. Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event. Jelmer J. Scholte NLR-ATSI CAATS II. Brussels, 13 & 14 Oct 2009. Contents. Motivation Safety case contents Practical development of safety case

michi
Download Presentation

Safety case development in ATM R&D

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. Safety case development in ATM R&D Safety feedback for decision-makers and concept developers Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event Jelmer J. Scholte NLR-ATSI CAATS II Brussels, 13 & 14 Oct 2009

  2. Contents • Motivation • Safety case contents • Practical development of safety case • Concluding remarks Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  3. History (1/2) Accident statistics of Large Aeroplane flights in commercial aviation Accidents Fatal Accidents Fatalities 1980-1999 period 2340 613 15,554 Average per year 117 30.7 777.7 Average per flight 5.57 E-6 1.46 E-6 37.0 E-6 Separation related 7.9% 3.75% 5.0% Source: NLR-ATSI’s Air Safety Data Base Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  4. History (2/2) Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  5. Current picture • It is good practice for an ANSP to develop a safety case for implementation of changes to its ATM system • to fulfill its own objectives and responsibilities • to satisfy safety regulations • Several safety regulations and methods are in use that were developed for use by an ANSP for changes to its ATM system • ESARR 4 • EC regulation 2096/ 2005 • EATMP ANS Safety Assessment Methodology (SAM) • Eurocontrol Safety Case Development Manual (SCDM) Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  6. A practical example (1/2) Independent paralleldepartures on SIDs Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  7. A practical example (2/2) • Key hazards in cockpit and at ATC • Crew makes error in entering the SID in FMS • ATC fails to communicate a late SID change to aircraft • ATC-published SID design entered wrongly in database • Resolution of conflicts involves ATCo and pilots • ATCo cannot solve the conflict without pilot • Pilot may correct SID errors independently • Timing of pilot’s R/T frequency change from TWR to APP • Challenge: • The role of the airline and the pilots is crucial • Focusing on ANSP is not desired! Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  8. Future challenges (1/2) Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  9. Future challenges (2/2) Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  10. Example solutions proposed • Reference business trajectories • Functional airspace blocks • Flexible use of airspace • ASAS applications • Reduced separation criteria • ... Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event R&D required to tackle the major design hurdle faced!

  11. Implemented Idea Concept V 0 V 1 V 2 V 3 V 4 V 5 ATM Needs Scope Feasibility Integration Pre-operation Operation Integrate concept in wider context And confirm performance Iteratively develop and evaluate concept Identify ATM performance needs & constraints Industrialisation and procedure approval Scope operational concepts and create validation strategy Implementation E-OCVM (1/2) • E-OCVM to support effective R&D: “... the process whereby the many stakeholders eventually should come to a decision to either: • Continue development to ... or • stop or substantially modify developments...” Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  12. E-OCVM (2/2) • E-OCVM poses specific, new requirements to safety case development • Feedback to stakeholders! Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  13. Summary of motivation • Most safety regulations & methods were developed for use by ANSP for changes to its ATM system • Major changes to air traffic operations are needed to maintain an acceptable level of safety • ambitious targets in multiple KPAs • large number of stakeholders involved • Major changes require R&D supported by safety analysis • E-OCVM is the framework for validation of these major changes • E-OCVM poses specific, new requirements to safety case development Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  14. Contents • Motivation • Safety case contents • Practical development of safety case • Concluding remarks Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  15. Safety analysis feedback to design Design Analysis Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  16. Safety analysis tailoredto maturity • The aim of safety analysis changes from V1 to V5 Safety feedback to design Safetyassurance Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event V5 V1

  17. Safety analysis objectives per phase Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  18. Safety analysis methods Safety case development in R&D has been subject of a lot of recent research • Experiences with developing a safety case in E-OCVM are just building up • Large design challenges pose several new needs to safety case development in R&D • Several complementary approaches are emerging that aim to address the SESAR-identified emerging needs • Integration so far limited Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  19. SESAR-identified emerging needs • The need for a ‘macro’ safety case • The need to address safety regulations • The need to address the multi-stakeholder nature of advancing air traffic operations • The need to address the success side of a change also • The need to cover human operators in the ATM system • The need to identify unknown ‘emergent’ risks • The need to address E-OCVM requirements • The need to assess concept maturity • The need for managing relations between cases Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  20. A: The need for a ‘macro’ safety case • Motivation: • SESAR consists of multiple local changes by various stakeholders. • Example: Functional Airspace Blocks • Includes many smaller changes • Identified approaches: • Connect to an overall incident-accident model • Apportioned safety criteria based on statistics • ‘Joint safety analysis’ Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  21. B: The need to address safety regulation • Motivation: “Developing the ATM safety regulatory framework is essential to the success of SESAR” • Example: ASAS applications • Responsibilities transfer from ground to cockpit • ESARR 4 applied to airline? • Identified approaches: • Early scanning of concepts on fundamental safety issues including existing safety regulations • Address impact of changed regulations in early safety analysis • Safety assessment assuming current regulations, while keeping track of needs for changes Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  22. C: The need to address the multi-stakeholder nature • Motivation • SESAR will fundamentally change stakeholder roles • Example: FABs • Who manages traffic? • Who is responsible? • Who decides on acceptability of risk? • Identified approach: • Safety validation framework with active roles to be played by all stakeholders • joint goal oriented approach • joint safety validation Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  23. D: The need to address the success side of a change also • Motivation: • Safety assessments have often focused on failure • ICAO has always asked to address the success side also • Example: TCAS RA downlink • Focus on failure of downlink? • What if downlink successful? • Identified approaches: • Integrated safety analysis covering both failures and successes • Complement traditional ‘failure approach’ with dedicated ‘success approach’ Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  24. H: The need to assess concept maturity • Motivation: How to decidewhether a concept is readyfor next E-OCVM phase? • Example: individual SESAR development projects • Identified approaches: • Generic SARD criteria (Strategic Assessment of ATM R&D) • Safety case specific set by CAATS II in SARD update • Safety case specific set by EEC (for ‘SAME’) Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  25. I: The need for managing relations between cases • Motivation: effectiveness and efficiency • Example: use of real-time simulations • Can multiple cases benefit? • Identified approaches: • Safety & HF: share info where useful, disjoint where needed • Safety & environment: disjoint analyses • Safety providing input to business • Framework for managing relations between cases Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  26. Contents • Motivation • Safety case contents • Practical development of safety case • Concluding remarks Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  27. Basic steps • Select the phase of E-OCVM’s Concept Lifecycle Model to be tackled • Determine objective and scope of safety analysis in line with the selected phase • Determine methods and techniques to be used • Document the results Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  28. Selection of methods/ techniques • Develop expertise and practical experience with emerging methods • Work on integration of emerging methods to combine their strong points • There are complementary needs of • advanced safety courses and • hands-on safety learning • Get an expert aware of these emerging needs, and with experience with emerging approaches! Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  29. Documentation • ‘Negative’ analysis results have great value as feedback to design • In R&D, the value is in the explanation why a concept is not yet valid or safe Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event Validation is most of the time invalidation Only the last cycle is validation!

  30. Contents • Motivation • Safety case contents • Practical development of safety case • Concluding remarks Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  31. Concluding remarks • Experiences with developing a safety case in E-OCVM are just building up • Several needs are emerging for safety case development for large design challenges, as traditional approaches fall short • Several complementary approaches have been identified that aim to address the SESAR-identified emerging needs • Key focus points: • Gain experience with emerging complementary approaches • Integration of emerging complementary approaches Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event

  32. Questions? Episode 3 - CAATS II Final Dissemination Event Brussels, 13 & 14 Oct 2009

More Related