Tag: pilots

  • Pilots give tips on packing

    From what to pack and how to squeeze it all in, to the benefits of roll-over folding and the weird thing you should put in the safe, some British Airways’ pilots share their professional secrets

    Senior First Officer Cliodhna Duggan, Boeing 777 fleet

    The night before my first training day at BA, 10 years ago, I packed my uniform and travelled to Heathrow in my civvies. It wasn’t until I got dressed the following morning I realised I’d forgotten my black uniform shoes. All I had were the bright yellow trainers I’d travelled in… I’ve learnt my lesson  I now always travel in my uniform.

    Travel is made so much worse if you’re tired, hungry or have a dead phone, so you should always take earplugs, snacks and a travel adapter. I recommend see-through ziploc bags too  they’re great for everything, including making sure your liquids don’t leak and for storing wet bikinis.

    For work I can pack my case in 10 minutes. The best advice I’ve ever been given is always to put your name and contact details inside your case as well as on a label on the outside. And if you’re putting your passport in a hotel room safe, be sure to put a shoe in there with them so you won’t forget about it.

    First Officer Aoife Duggan, Airbus A320 fleet

    For work, I can pack my case in less than three minutes. In my bag, you’ll always find a small handbag that folds flat, a good lip balm for dealing with dry cabin air, and spare undies in case I get stuck somewhere for longer than planned. During the winter I’ll also pack a mini hot water bottle. Some hotel rooms never get warm, plus I find it hard to warm up on long night flights.

    My fiancé always asks me to pack for him, though that’s not without flaws. We once arrived on holiday to discover he had no underwear packed at all.

    Captain Rob Johnson, Airbus A320 fleet

    Packing a case has been part of my life for 16 years, so these days I can do it in minutes. The best bits of packing advice I’ve ever received are to ask myself ‘Do you really need it?’ and ‘Can you even carry all this?’

    As an author of children’s books (Plane Characters), I always pack a notebook and pencil for when I’m exploring a new city. I use these notes in helping to compose my stories. The one thing I wouldn’t travel without is my running kit. After a long day sitting on a plane it’s great to get out for a jog and some fresh air.

    For an easy-to-pack souvenir, I like olive oil. Wrap the bottle in a plastic bag and then wrap it again in some of your dirty clothes before packing it securely in the middle of your case. As long as it’s in there snugly, it won’t break.

  • How we prepare for flights – BA Pilots

    How we prepare for flights – BA Pilots

    From what to pack and how to squeeze it all in, to the benefits of roll-over folding and the weird thing you should put in the safe, some British Airways’ pilots share their professional secrets

    Senior First Officer Cliodhna Duggan, Boeing 777 fleet 

    The night before my first training day at BA, 10 years ago, I packed my uniform and travelled to Heathrow in my civvies. It wasn’t until I got dressed the following morning I realised I’d forgotten my black uniform shoes. All I had were the bright yellow trainers I’d travelled in… I’ve learnt my lesson – I now always travel in my uniform.

    Travel is made so much worse if you’re tired, hungry or have a dead phone, so you should always take earplugs, snacks and a travel adapter. I recommend see-through ziploc bags too – they’re great for everything, including making sure your liquids don’t leak and for storing wet bikinis.

    For work I can pack my case in 10 minutes. The best advice I’ve ever been given is always to put your name and contact details inside your case as well as on a label on the outside. And if you’re putting your passport in a hotel room safe, be sure to put a shoe in there with them so you won’t forget about it.

    Project Pilot Ilkka Tahvanainen, Airbus training, A380 fleet 

    I live in Finland and commute to work in the UK, where I might be flying, doing simulator training or working in the office. In addition to the essentials (wash bag, my British Airways ID and my flying licence), I take swimming trunks for any impromptu dips, and travel binoculars for checking out in detail some of the remote places we fly over. The mountains in the Canadian Arctic are particularly stunning.

    It’s not often I have a packing disaster, though I did once arrive somewhere to discover I’d brought the kids’ socks instead of mine. I have a neat way for folding shirts – I do up most of the buttons, then fold the ironed shirt along the middle vertical line. Then I fold the sleeves in and fold the shirt in two. The shirt comes out without needing to be ironed.

    First Officer Chloe Harrison, Airbus A320 fleet, Gatwick 

    My longest work trips are three days so I never carry much more than gym kit and a pair of jeans. My advice for frequent travellers is to have your suitcase ready to go at all times. When I return from a trip, I just wash whatever’s in my wash bag and put it back in. Then all I have to add is a clean shirt and my toothbrush just before I leave. The most surprising thing I travel with is tin foil. Why? So I can use the iron in my hotel room to turn a cheese sandwich into a toastie!

    I’m a huge fan of the rolling method for packing – you can jam in so much more stuff. This is particularly true in the winter, when you have to pack ‘warm’. Stuffing tights into shoes and rolling up toiletries into jeans helps.

    First Officer Aoife Duggan, Airbus A320 fleet 

    For work, I can pack my case in less than three minutes. In my bag, you’ll always find a small handbag that folds flat, a good lip balm for dealing with dry cabin air, and spare undies in case I get stuck somewhere for longer than planned. During the winter I’ll also pack a mini hot water bottle. Some hotel rooms never get warm, plus I find it hard to warm up on long night flights.

    My fiancé always asks me to pack for him, though that’s not without flaws. We once arrived on holiday to discover he had no underwear packed at all.

    Captain Rob Johnson, Airbus A320 fleet

    Packing a case has been part of my life for 16 years, so these days I can do it in minutes. The best bits of packing advice I’ve ever received are to ask myself ‘Do you really need it?’ and ‘Can you even carry all this?’

    As an author of children’s books (Plane Characters), I always pack a notebook and pencil for when I’m exploring a new city. I use these notes in helping to compose my stories. The one thing I wouldn’t travel without is my running kit. After a long day sitting on a plane it’s great to get out for a jog and some fresh air.

    For an easy-to-pack souvenir, I like olive oil. Wrap the bottle in a plastic bag and then wrap it again in some of your dirty clothes before packing it securely in the middle of your case. As long as it’s in there snugly, it won’t break.

  • Pilots, engineers plan proposal for Buhari

    Pilots, engineers plan proposal for Buhari

    The National Association of Aircraft Pilots and Engineers ( NAAPE)  plans to submit a proposal to President Muhammadu Buhari on how to fix sore points in the aviation sector, its General Secretary, Ocheme Aba, has said.

    He said the proposal to the government would reflect the views of stakeholders on key civil aviation regulations, flight safety and security as well as protectionism and liberalisation of bilateral air services agreement .

    Aba said the association decided to forward the position paper to the government to douse ongoing  discordance of tunes coming from various aviation stakeholders .

    He said :”  Our resolve to send the position paper is coming

    at a time when the new Federal administration is in the process of setting new agenda of reforms in all sectors of the economy.

    ”NAAPE considers this present state of animosity among various elements of the aviation family to be a dangerous trend which needs to be urgently arrested, less aviation misses this golden opportunity to take its rightful place as a driver of economic prosperity in Nigeria.

    “It is, therefore, in a bid to provide a platform for the aviation family to muster together at this critical junction of our national life that NAAPE is organising an Aviation Stakeholders Forum which outcome will be a unified and unifying aviation agenda for the Buhari government.”

    He further said :” It is pertinent to note that several other key stakeholders will equally present individual and group views for dissection at the forum.

    “The synthesised views which will be presented to government will, therefore, be fully representative, encompassing, and will no doubt act as active ingredients for the rapid and sustainable growth of the aviation industry in Nigeria.”

    Meanwhile, NAAPE will today hold a stakeholders forum to discus myriad of challenges confronting the sector.

    A former rector, Nigerian College of Aviation Technology (NCAT), Captain Adebayo Araba will chair the forum .

    A former of airworthiness standards engineer at the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Patrick Ekunwe, will lead discussion with his paper titled : “ Bottlenecks , shortcomings and competences in Nigerian civil aviation regulations .

    A retired air traffic controller , Sam Akerele, will discuss a paper titled:”Issues in Nigerian flight safety environment – An overview.”

    While, Capt. Adeyemi Dare , a former staff of NCAA will examine the title: “ Liberalism Vsp Protectionism – Whither Nigerian national interest: An aviation sector perspective.”

     

  • Europe pilots to be psychologically screened

    Commercial pilots in Europe should undergo psychological assessments as part of their initial training, or before they enter service with an airline say new recommendations from the European Aviation Safety Agency.

    EASA also says they should undergo regular testing for drugs and alcohol, and never be left alone in the cockpit.

    It was asked by the EC to report on the loss of Germanwings flight 9525. The aircraft crashed into the Alps in March, killing all 144 on board.

    The accident has been blamed on the co-pilot, Andreas Lubitz, who was in control of the plane at the time.

    Evidence from the flight data recorders suggests that he crashed the plane deliberately.

    The report was produced by a task force, consisting of 14 senior representatives from airlines, flight crew associations, medical advisors and authorities.

    It points out that, although most pilots do undergo psychological evaluations as part of their initial training programmes, this is not always the case.

    Some can begin flying commercial aircraft without ever having undergone one.

    The report says in future such testing should be made mandatory for all pilots, and the psychological element of regular medical checks should be strengthened.

    It adds that because the abuse of alcohol and drugs can potentially harm the mental health of pilots as well as affecting their ability to fly a plane, airlines should be compelled to introduce random testing.

    Another controversial issue looked at in the report is data protection law. It says that “an appropriate balance” needs to be found between patient confidentiality and the need to protect public safety.

    A database should also be set up to allow basic medical information about pilots to be shared, and there should also be a “robust oversight programme” to oversee the training and performance of aero-medical advisers.

    The report also says that current EASA advice to airlines, which states that there should be at least two people in the cockpit at all times, should be maintained.

    The so-called “rule of two” is not legally binding in Europe.

    EASA’s recommendation was issued in the wake of the Germanwings crash, and the policy has since been widely adopted..

  • NCAA alerts pilots to harmattan haze hazard

    The Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) has  alerted pilots to the  harmattan dust haze at this period

    Its General Manager, Public Affairs, Fan Ndubuoke, said the  warning became imperative because harmattan poses obvious risk to aircrafts particularly in terrain with low visibility.

    He urged pilots to obtain adequate  information before departure, and in transit; destination weather information and briefing from the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NIMET) before their flights.

    According to him, pilots are  advised to exercise maximum restraint when strong surface wind, fog or harmattan haze are observed or forecast, pointing out that the  alert is in line with the seasonal weather prediction issued by the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NIMET) on the cessation of rainy season in 2014.

    Ndubuike  said:” The Harmattan is a dry and dusty wind that blows southwards from the Sahara across the country between the end of November to March, the following year. On its passage over the desert, it picks up large amount of fine dust particles (0.5 to 10 micrometers) which are transported hundreds of kilometres over the south.

    “The effect of the dust and sand stirred by the wind is known as Harmattan Dust Haze.

    “In addition, the consequence of the harmattan is a heavy fog hence air – to – ground visibility is considerably reduced.

    “Aerodrome visibility may fall below the prescribed minima and in severe conditions; dust haze can blot out runways, the markers and airfield lightings over wide areas. This makes visual navigation extremely difficult or impossible.

    “Resultantly, where visibility falls below the prescribed weather minima, flight operations are likely to be delayed, diverted or outrightly cancelled. All concerned are required to ensure compliance with this circular.”

  • ‘Local content ’ll address pilots’ unemployment’

    ‘Local content ’ll address pilots’ unemployment’

    Senior Special Assistant to the President on Aviation Matters, Captain Shehu a Usman Iyal has described the proposed local content bill  for the aviation sector by the National Assembly  as one of the ways of creating jobs for unemployed  indigenous pilots.

    Iyal said the bill when passed into law will make it mandatory for both domestic and foreign airlines to employ a certain number of pilots and aircraft engineers.

    Iyal said Nigeria would be emulating the practice in countries such as Malaysia and Indonesia where it is mandatory for airlines to employ locals on the flight deck.

    Iyal spoke against the backdrop of 66 pilots and 61 aircraft engineers that have graduated from different aviation institutions organised by the presidential amnesty programme .

    The pilots and aircraft engineers were trained at the Afrika Union Aviation Academy, Mafikeng, and Flight Training Services, Midrand, both in South Africa, Lufthansa Flight Training Network, Germany, Fujairah Aviation Academy, United Arab Emirates, Jetstream Aviation Academy, Greece, and Royal Jordanian Air Academy, Amman, Jordan.

    He explained that the Federal Government will collaborate with aviation agencies to ensure  the pilots and aircraft engineers  who were trained and type rated after training from the amnesty programme would be absorbed  into the aviation sector.

  • Nigeria’s increasing  grounded pilots

    Nigeria’s increasing grounded pilots

    The monster of unemployment spares no sector as Assistant Editor, Investigations, Joke Kujenya, discovered when she recently met with a few out of about 200 unemployed pilots in Lagos.

    BEFORE now, unemployed pilots were virtually unheard of. Being a pilot was glamorous, exciting, and highly rewarding. With their fascinating uniforms, crisply white or black, featuring single-breasted blazers with gold or silver braiding and decorated with insignia akin to naval uniforms, representing his or her duties on board an aircraft, almost every youth coveted becoming a pilot.

    Today, things have changed. As at the last count, Nigeria is said to have between 400 and 600 trained but unemployed pilots. Currently grouped under the aegis of Nigerian Professional Pilots (NPP), they are trained and Nigeria licensed.

    Kano State is said to be currently training about 100 pilots in Jordan, while the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) is training about 74 in South Africa. The NCAT, Zaria, is set to graduate about 125 in December, while several others are being trained in Ilorin. This means that Nigeria could be having about 500 pilots joining the already swamped market of unemployed pilots in about another year with nowhere to work.

    Speaking on the scary scenario, Captain Nogie Meggison, JEdAIr CEO, and Chairman, Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON) told The Nation on Sunday, “the situation is this bleak because it is unlike many years ago when the aviation sector was booming, when the profession created a huge demand for commercial pilots, foreign and domestic, landing airline jobs immediately after graduating from flying schools. Then, it was more like something on the tip of a finger. But now, things are no longer so. Today, hundreds of trained pilots, both in Nigeria and in other countries of the world, now roam the streets in search of very scarce aviation jobs. As I speak to you, we have about 180 of them in the NPP list, all with Nigerian licenses. We have some Nigerians getting trained in the USA and other places and if you add all of them, we are talking of about 500-600 Nigerian youths getting trained as pilots waiting to further bloat the ranks of the unemployed in Nigeria. So, what bleeds my heart is that in another year, pilots, who are like fresh breath could become stale, no one would be willing to take the stale breath over the fresh ones. A pilot that does not get into the cockpit after six months is mandated to go for re-training. By the time they are two years out of work, they are no longer considered pilots. They must go for recertification. And we are talking of pilots who have been on ground for two, three, four five years and more.”

    Lamenting the state of unemployment in the industry, he said “Today, we have a rough figure of about 150 private jets in this country. And out of these, foreign pilots spend at least 60percent of their time in our country flying these jets. That automatically makes them residents in this country. And to every plane, there are two pilots. What we are saying is, take one foreign pilot and pair him or her with one home-based pilot, and this number will start reducing fast, and let the pair do a rotation one month on and one month off so that the routine will cover every professional pilot. Multiply 150 by four, that gives you 600. Today as we count, those private jets have roughly about 600 pilots flying our air space. But here, we have Nigeria’s younger blood willing to work but not being provided the platform.”

     

    Economic meltdown

    Reports show that this problem started with the economic recession of the 1980s and 1990s causing not only stagnation of aviation market, but also huge downsizing, according to an aviation operator at the international wing of the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Ikeja, Lagos.

    He said “As usual, we all thought that the tough times for a record number of unemployed pilots, would not be something that would become a dilemma. But seeing our future generation of Nigerians still awaiting landing a job with major airlines immediately after graduation is heart-rendering. Truth is, I see the golden-era for piloting job being gone, unless something drastic, as making a law forcing all airline operators to ensure that they employ one foreigner and a Nigerian as the co-pilot. If that is not done, our own younger pilots, being churned out of the Nigerian College of Aviation Technology (NCAT), Zaria, every year, may have a very long time of waiting for elusive jobs as a pilot. In other words, they may have their dreams easily shattered.”

    In India, it is reported that the current situation in aviation job market is equally demoralising, with the mood of job seeking pilots, being largely depression.

    On a Facebook wall of non-working pilot, it was said that India reports around 6,000 unemployed pilots.

    In Europe, online information reports around 8000 jobless pilots being predicted to be residing in that region. And according to what is described as ‘sad statistics results’ on the situation in Europe, it is said that this shows in negative comments in news portals and aviation forums reflecting expectations heavily down in ever getting return on investment in acquiring commercial pilots’ certification.

    And according to the Head, Lithuanian Pilot Training Academy, Baltic Aviation Academy, Indre Sveistryte, “life has been tough for the young cadets at the moment and talks have been on the current situation, reasons and solutions.”

    He noted that there is a new term “frozen ATPL”, which has become common in the industry as slang for the young cadets with a Commercial Pilot’s license meeting the requirements for issuing of a full ATPL licence to pilot a commercial aircraft, but lacking 1500 hours of flight time to land their dream job offers at commercial airlines.

    Sveistryte said when the new wave of students graduated from the flight schools, a downturn was already on with the airline jobs interview doors’ closed. As a result, commercial aviation market at the moment is facing complex challenges- that is, a global surplus of fresh cadet pilots lacking flying hours and a shortage of experienced captains in certain developing markets. He added however, that not all cockpits are closed. There still are some jobs in the market for young cadets, though offering not the best view a young dreamer wants to see from the cockpit window, as it might be not even piloting Airbus or Boeing.

    He added that more than 2000 aviation professionals study annually at the Baltic Aviation Academy (BAA) and each of them spends up to 12.000 hours in flight simulators. As an academy, BAA is an institution that specialises in aircraft crew training, aircraft crew formation, consultation services as well as the initial flight courses for the private pilot license which are held at the pilot and flight steward training centre in Vilnius or through a range of European flight simulation centres network.

    He said that according to Boeing Current Market Outlook of 2010, the need to support fleet growth and retirements, an additional 466,650 pilots will be required over the next 20 years by the commercial aviation industry, which represents a need of around 23,300 per year. He adds that, Asia Pacific has been the most demanding region over a 20-year period, yet, it requires 180,600 pilots. Similarly, China alone accounts for 70,600 Europe forecast a need for 94,800, North America 97,350, Latin America 37,000, the Middle East 32,700, Africa 13,200 and the CIS 11,000.

    But here in Nigeria, it is said that the problems of unemployed aviation graduates are not just compounded by decline in the economy, it is more so because domestic airline operators shun Nigerian pilots as many of them rather prefer to pay extravagantly to hire foreign pilots. This development, aviation expert say, is the major cause of the exceptional increase in the number of unemployed pilots in the country.

    Another official told The Nation that there can be little hope for domestic pilots as Nigeria’s chartered and local airline operators prefer foreign pilots. “In fact, even billionaire jet-owners are guilty of same. Yet, most of the job-searching pilots don’t even mind being employed as co-pilots. Can you believe that most of our airline operators do not want to train our local pilots because the money they would spend on them. Up till today, most aviation graduates from Nigeria and overseas flying schools complete their courses with about 250 and 500 flight-hours whereas many airlines are asking for pilots that have between 1,000 and 1,500 flight-hours to employ. So, you see that we have a dilemma on our hands. That is why you are seeing our pilots trained in NCAT, many from South Africa, United States of America (USA), and others from aviation schools in Europe, as well as a few others, being made redundant by Nigerian airline employers.”

    Expressing her concern over the development, NCAT Chief Executive Officer, (CEO), Captain Chinyere Kalu, said things were not like this in the past. “Few years ago, airlines used to employ pilots and train them on the job. It is thus a big blow why the tradition was unexpectedly stopped by domestic airline operators. She said it seems what the airline operators may be dodging is training of home-based pilots to get the type-rating.” According to her, it often costs airliners a fortune to send pilots for type-rating on Boeing 737 for instance. Another aspect the airliners are wary of is that some of the locally trained pilots could leave their services for higher paying jobs after they might have spent huge sums of money in training them.

    On an optimistic note a new government policy on pilot employment is already in the offing to address the problem. If implemented, the policy will spell out to she says airline operators that after training the students, they have to work for their employers for a minimum number of years before they can leave.

     

    Hope on the horizon

    Kalu, expresses the hope that as regional airlines are being set up will provide a soft landing for freshly graduated pilots from NCAT and other colleges where they could work and build up the required number of hours to acquire, at least, jet engine rating to be like a stepping stone for them to get to the next level. That is being highly hoped for. Sadly, many of the regional jets are also being manned mostly by foreigners. “But I believe that with a policy in effect, Nigeria will insist that our own trained citizens must be the ones flying the aircraft as that is what obtains in the USA and most countries of the world.”

    Meggison adds: “My heart bleeds at the plight of these brilliant set of Nigerians. And you can’t tell me they are the future of Nigeria when as a matter of fact, you, the government, makes no provisions for their future, which already, is wasting away today.

    “As we speak, there are over 600 of them though they don’t want to show their faces and names lest they are dubbed rebels. But I weep seeing how their future ebbs by the day and their hopes for career as pilots dim. So, you want to ask, why do we have many foreign pilots in the country and allow our own trained to remain unemployed? Have you tried to see the brilliant resumes of some of these young pride of ours in the country? You need to see them and then you will agree with me that we must address this issue as a matter of urgency.

    “I had expected that the newly introduced government policy on private jet would address the problem. But alas, we are still on it. You have governors, the Nigerian Police and many private owners purchasing private jets and still employing the services of expatriates. Why don’t they give these ones a chance, watch them grow as experts and then, Nigeria’s future is richly ensured? But no, they won’t do that. Unless we get foreigners, we are not sure of our own. For me as a person, I am seriously displeased that foreigners have taken over pilot jobs from our young pilots. And unless this is stopped, their numbers will rise.

    “We have some that had been out of jobs as pilots for upward of 10 to 12 years. They don’t just want to show their faces. Some of them have taken up other menial jobs for survival. Many of them had first degrees before delving into training as pilots. So, we are not talking about failures or layabouts. We are talking of brilliant, promising Nigerians. ”

    A female aviation official said the high number of foreign pilots is as a result of the fact that the bulk of the planes are foreign-registered and are on “wet-lease”. This means that the aircraft can only be flown by foreign pilots.

    She added, “Expatriate pilots must not continue to dominate our aviation market to the detriment of our local pilots. We have an estimated minimum of 800 expatriate pilots flying in Nigeria whereas we have just about 200 Nigerian pilots out of job. So, all we need is for our government to make it a 50-50 case by saying every one foreign pilot must have a Nigerian co-pilot in the cockpit. We need to have deliberate transfer of technology and skills to the younger generation. That is the only way our Nigerian pilots can have a fair share of the jobs in the Nigerian aviation industry. ”

    However, many experts spoken to say that the reasons for not employing many of these young Nigerian pilots could be that they are not type-rated to work on certain aircrafts. They then suggested that the situation can only be resolved when our government shows commitment to the plight of this young Nigerians, formulate policy and above all, invest in standard aviation facilities particularly in the areas of training and simulation capabilities.

  • Missing Malaysian plane: Police quiz families of pilot, co-pilots

    The families of the pilot and co-pilots of a missing Malaysian jetliner were among more than 100 people interviewed by investigators, seeking clues about the disappearance.

    A senior Malaysian official said this on Monday.

    “We can confirm that the police have interviewed more than a hundred people, including families of both the pilot and co-pilot,’’ Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said.

    Investigators intensified their focus on passengers and crew of the Malaysia Airlines flight MH 370 after Prime Minister Najib Razak said the disappearance of the plane appeared to be a “deliberate” act.

  • Why young Nigerian pilots are unemployed, by experts

    Why young Nigerian pilots are unemployed, by experts

    AVIATION experts have identifed the absence of a national carrier, low flight hours after graduation, low insurance cover and lack of implementation of expatriate quota policy as reasons for unemployment of fresh pilots.

    The experts are Gbolahan Abatan, an aircraft engineer, Sheri Kyari, Executive Director of Centre for Aviation Safety and Research (CAS-R), and Isaac Balami, president, National Association of Aircraft Pilots and Engineers (NAAPE).

    They spoke to The Nation in Lagos.

    Other experts who also spoke include Captain Ore, retired airline and Captain Ibrahim Mshelia, chief executive officer, West Link Airlines.

    Abatan claimed fresh graduate pilots were not being employed because their flight hours at graduation were insufficient.

    Abatan, who is the Chief Executive of Air First, said the experience of a pilot is required before he can get a job.

    He added that many fresh pilots only have 230 hours instead of between 500 and 700 flight hours required to fly certain categories of aircraft.

    The AirFirst boss pointed out that pilots, including those who fly jumbo aircraft, such as Airbus 380 and Boeing 787, started with smaller airplanes.

    “Every pilot started flying from General Aviation. Nobody jumps into a Boeing 747 to become a pilot of Boeing 747,” he said.

    Abatan said further that in the United States, pilots from the flying schools do not look for jobs in bigger airlines, such as Delta and United because they will not be employed since they do not have the required flying hours.

    To solve the problem, Abatan advocated an improved capacity for general aviation. He added that Nigeria has this problem because it had not trained pilots for a long time.

    He also added that while pilots were not being trained, some airlines were employing foreign pilots to work for them because it was cheaper to do so.

    To correct this, he said aviation should have a functional general aviation.

    “One of the first steps is the general aviation. In most countries they have general aviation functioning. General aviation is the beginning.”

    But Kyari has a different solution. He said the establishment of a national carrier would assist to resolve the problem of young pilot unemployment.

    He said: ”The national carrier will provide employment, especially for the teeming young pilots that are seeking jobs in the industry.

    “It would also serve as a training ground for such pilots to grow.Training will also be enhanced and many other benefits will accrue to the nation.”

    Balami bemoaned compliance with expatriate quota by the government, which allows for the employment of foreign pilots to the detriment of young Nigeria pilots.

    Balami said: “I think the government should look at it very well to see how to reverse the trend and put a policy in place to encourage Nigerian pilots to get jobs.The local content policy is not working the way it should. “

    Captain Ore, who is the President of Aviation Round Table (ART), called for provision of more aviation training facilities, such as flying schools and Aviation Training Organisations (ATO) to provide jobs for young pilots.

    He added that the foremost aviation training school in Nigeria, the Nigeria College of Aviation Technology (NCAT), Zaria, should be upgraded.

    “The influx of expatriate pilots has become so worrisome that expatriate quota has become a big issue in the aviation industry,” he said.

    Mshelia, a pilot, called on the government to assist young Nigerian pilots get jobs.

    He said: ”The unemployment rate among Nigerian pilots trained within and outside Nigeria, which in the last count from the website of the Unemployed Pilots Union in Nigeria is over 150 in number.”

    He also said the new Civil Aviation Policy should address employment of qualified Nigerians before extending similar opportunities to foreigners.

    “What we need to consider is getting the pilot licence is one thing and getting the experience to be considered for employment is another, which can only be achieved by flying.”

    “The reason for the high rate of unemployment is simple. There is no legislation, which gives opportunity for employment of Nigerians with same qualification with foreigners.”

    But the Chief Executive Officer of NCAT, Captain Chinyere Kalu, said a new government policy on pilot employment would address the problem.

    In the past, she said airlines employed pilots and trained them.

    She wondered why the practice was abandoned.

    Kalu said: “

    What the airlines are shying away from is training the pilots to get the type rating. If the pilots are going for type rating on Boeing 737, for example, it is going to cost the airline a reasonable amount of money.

    “There is fear among the airlines that after training the students, they may leave. So, I suggest that there should be a policy that will say once an operator trains you, you have to work for that operator for a minimum number of years. I believe that will help.”

    She also said, “These pilots have the basic training and basic qualification. The good thing is that with all these regional aircraft springing up in the industry, there is provision for a soft landing for the newly graduated students. They could work for them and build hours and maybe have a jet engine rating. This will be like a stepping stone for help them to go to the next level.

    “But unfortunately, many of these regional jets are manned by foreigners. If there will be a policy put in place that will insist that our own local people should be the ones flying the aircraft, it will help. In the USA, that is what happens.

     

  • ‘Why pilots, others flout aviation regulations’

    ‘Why pilots, others flout aviation regulations’

    • NCAA summons operators

    Nonchalance and reliance on executive fiat are some of the reasons pilots and other operators flout civil aviation regulations with impunity, The Nation has learnt.

    Experts in the industry, who made this known, agreed on the need for the regulatory agencies to stamp their feet to end the reign of impunity in the sector to guard against a return to the era of air mishaps in the country.

    Non-compliance of pilots to file the mandatory flight plan and submission of passenger manifest before any flight approval is granted have become the order of the day in recent times involving highly placed individuals in the country.

    Regulator of the industry, the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) is worried by this development and has summoned a meeting with and general aviation operators to seek solutions to the problem, which it has described as unusual.

    NCAA Acting Director-General, Mr Joyce Daniel Nkemakolam, described the failure to comply with aviation regulation as a serious infraction by pilots, blaming this on the culture of people taking things for granted.

    He described the disregard for rules by pilots as an unhealthy development for the sector, insisting that the NCAA will continue to insist that pilots obey the rules of civil aviation.

    “The NCAA has observed this development as unusual. It is a case of pilots just taking things for granted. What does it take a pilot to simply comply with the rules of filing a flight plan and submitting the manifest of passengers before the aircraft takes off?

    “Such disrespect for the rules is not healthy for the civil aviation industry, because failure to declare the passenger manifest and file a flight plan could be considered a serious infraction with security implications. We have called for a meeting with all scheduled and general aviation operators to review the situation, and we insist pilots must do what is right,” he said.

    General Manager, Air Traffic Control Operations, Nigeria Airspace Management Authority (NAMA), Mr Chuks John Onyegiri, said regulations are breached in the country because certain persons feel they could always hide under the cover of executive connections to get away with infractions in the aviation industry, which is safety-driven.

    He added: “With (the) security issues in the country now, NAMA needs to know who is on board. It is purely on security and safety issues. Nothing is wrong if the pilot does what is expected of him by giving the name of passengers on board.  But, some pilots think they could flout the regulations by using executive connection.”

    Coordinating spokesman of Aviation Agencies, Mr Yakubu Dati, said the relevant aviation agencies should sanction any airline and the pilot that violates safety procedures in the country. He noted that the pilots and airline operators have become used to taking things for granted.

    On the wave of controversies that greeted the grounding of the aircraft allegedly belonging to Rivers State Government in Port Harcourt, for airspace violation and the AOS Helicopter that was supposed to fly Edo State Governor to Awka from Benin, the NCAA boss said there was no political interference on the matter.

    Spokesman of Nigeria Airspace Management Agency (NAMA), Mr Supo Atobatele, adduced non-compliance with civil aviation regulation by pilots as the main reason for willful flouting of regulators’ regulations.

    He said: “The pilot of the helicopter should be held responsible for his failure to comply with a mandatory operational directive issued by NAMA since April that all pilots must submit a flight plan and file passenger manifest before any flight. It has no political undertone at all, but purely an aviation matter bordering on rules and regulation.”

    Onyegiri said the pilot should be blamed for the incident because he failed to comply with simple instructions.

    Dati said it is mandatory for the pilot to have the safety requirements.