Title: Preliminary Results
1Preliminary Results
- EHEST Conference
- 13 October 2008
- Cascais, Portugal
2Contents
- Data set description
- General data
- Identified factors data
- Standard Problem Statements
- HFACS
- Intervention Recommendations
- Concluding Remarks Way forward
3Data set description
4Scope of analysis
- Based on a data driven approach
- Focus on
- Accidents (definition ICAO Annex 13)
- Date of occurrence year 2000 - 2005
- State of occurrence located in Europe
- For this purpose Europe is defined as the EASA
Member States (27 EU plus Iceland,
Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland) - Only those accidents are being analysed where a
final report from Accident Investigation Board is
available
5Scope of preliminary dataset
- Total of 186 within timeframe 2000-2005 have been
analysed - Covers work from 9 Regional Teams across Europe
- Does not cover all accidents within timeframe
- Preliminary results, not fully representative of
European accidents in the reference period - The following slides present preliminary results
based on these 186 accidents
6Proportion of analysed accidents
Estimated data for the 9 Regional Teams
currently participating
7General Data
Picture Source Eurocopter
8General data
9General data
10General data
11General data
12General data
13General data
14General data
15General data
16General data
17General data
18Identified factors dataStandard Problem
Statements HFACS
19Identified factors data
- Two models used for identification of factors
- SPS
- HFACS
- Standard Problem Statements
- In total 1067 factors identified for all 186
accidents - HFACS
- In total 445 factors identified for all 186
accidents
20SPS level 1 All Accidents
21SPS level 1 compared with US JHSAT data
Correlation is .89
22SPS level 2 (top 10) All Accidents (excluding
Data Issues)
23HFACS model
Facilitate identification of the underlying
causes
Merely symptoms
24HFACS model upper levels
Unsafe Acts
Errors
Violations
16
84
25HFACS model upper levels
Preconditions
Environmental Factors
Condition of Individuals
Personnel Factors
17
60
23
26HFACS model upper levels
27HFACS model upper levels
28Going into more detail
- The following slides present the lowest level in
the taxonomy level 3 - This provides a more detailed insight into the
type of accidents occurring - Results will be presented for the three main
types of operation - Commercial Air Transport
- Aerial Work
- General Aviation
29An example Commercial Air Transport scenario
- Once the patient was boarded the helicopter took
off despite the degraded weather condition
because an ambulance was waiting to bring the
patient to the hospital. - The helicopter hit the ground (snowed surface)
with the right skid and nosed over just after
take off in poor visibility due to falling and
blowing snow.
30An example Commercial Air Transport scenario
- Once the patient was boarded the helicopter took
off despite the degraded weather condition
because an ambulance was waiting to bring the
patient to the hospital. - The helicopter hit the ground (snowed surface)
with the right skid and nosed over just after
take off in poor visibility due to falling and
blowing snow.
Loss of Visual Reference
Inadequate decisions
Pilot felt pressure
31SPS level 3 (top issues)Commercial Air Transport
32HFACS level 3 (top issues)Commercial Air
Transport
33An example Aerial Work scenario
- During vertical take off with external cargo from
a confined landing area in the forest, the
helicopter started to rotate to the left after
having cleared the tree tops. - The helicopter lost altitude, contacted the
surrounding trees and crashed.
34An example Aerial Work scenario
- During vertical take off with external cargo from
a confined landing area in the forest, the
helicopter started to rotate to the left after
having cleared the tree tops. - The helicopter lost altitude, contacted the
surrounding trees and crashed.
Operated near maximum take-off mass
Obstacles
Pilot intensive
Tailwind
Loss of tail rotor effectiveness
Cargo not released
35SPS level 3 (top issues)Aerial Work
36HFACS level 3 (top issues)Aerial Work
37An example General Aviation scenario
- The helicopter was on a Visual Flight Rules
flight. En route, it entered an area of rising
terrain and low cloud base. - Radar tracking indicates that the helicopter
slowed down, and then made a sharp turn before
disappearing off the screen. - The helicopter then suffered an in-flight
collision with terrain directly after the loss of
radar contact.
38An example General Aviation scenario
- The helicopter was on a Visual Flight Rules
flight. En route, it entered an area of rising
terrain and low cloud base. - Radar tracking indicates that the helicopter
slowed down, and then made a sharp turn before
disappearing off the screen. - The helicopter then suffered an in-flight
collision with terrain directly after the loss of
radar contact.
No weather forecast obtained
No flight plan filed
No contact established with ATC
Inadvertent IMC
Limited experience
39SPS level 3 (top issues)General Aviation
40HFACS level 3 (top issues)General Aviation
41Intervention Recommendations
42Intervention Recommendations
- In total 11 Intervention Recommendation
categories identified - The categories help identify areas for working
groups of EHSIT - Note some categories do overlap but they do
succeed in suggesting areas to focus
43Intervention Recommendations for All Accidents
44Overview of top categories
45Example IRs
- Within each IR type there are a wide range of
different interventions that have already been
identified so far - The following are some un-prioritised examples
from across all operational categories
46IRs Examples Training/Instruction
- Better training for specific missions operating
environments - E.g. Improve training for mountain operations
specifically for landing on snow covered surfaces - Better training for inadvertent entry in IMC
condition - Better training on type specific issues and
operational limits. - Special training supervision arrangements should
be considered when dealing with slow learning
students who are taking longer to complete the
PPL(H) syllabus.
47IRs Examples Training/Instruction
- Instructors/examiners be updated more regularly
by TRTOs. - Establish measures to avoid culture of
non-compliance - Include risk assessment training
- Encourage organising private helicopter pilots
into flying clubs etc for mutual support and
better exchange of experiences / safety
information
48IRs Examples Flight Ops Safety
Management/Culture
- Develop safety management system (SMS)
- Promoting a safety culture vs. getting the job
done regardless - Investigate the user-friendliness of checklists
- Manage human factors risk especially regarding
routine violation - Use a Flight Data Monitoring system to give
feedback to pilots - Increased oversight of new pilots
- During the mission preparation, the management
should take into account the experience of each
crew member and mix the different skills. - Better planning especially for higher risk
missions - Increase awareness of obstacles provision of
Wire Strike Protection System
49IR Examples Regulatory
- Require greater flight data recording usage to
assist in future occurrence investigation - Promote research inexpensive, lightweight,
airborne flight data and voice recording
equipment for smaller helicopters - VFR flight criteria for helicopters and licence
privileges for pilots should be reviewed to
reduce the risk from flight in a Degraded Visual
Environment - Review the deck markings on ships involved in
winching operations with the aim of including a
requirement to clearly display the dimensions of
the 'manoeuvring zone', such that it can be
clearly seen by the helicopter crew. - Establish specific training requirements for
operational crew members other than flight crew
required for aerial works operations.
50Other Selected IR Examples
- Improve crashworthiness survivability
- Improve OEM manufacturing quality assurance
- Establish safe limits of helideck movement for
helicopters operating offshore - Validated, simplified weight and balance process
should be made available - Provide better information on aircraft fuel
consumption for pilots to safely plan flights on
the basis of verified fuel contents. - Type specific airworthiness improvements
- Making specific safety enhancing equipment part
of the build standard - Making specific equipment available for operators
to adapt aircraft for specific missions /
environments
51Intervention Recommendations - Way forward
- It is expected the EHSIT will need to prioritise
the Interventions Recommendations based on safety
benefit and practicality - Different types of EHSIT organisations can be
envisaged - By type of operation
- By type of recommendation
- By type of activity
- Mix of the above
- Other
- Centralised or regional-based
52Concluding Remarks Way forward
Picture Source Eurocopter
53Concluding remarks
- EHSAT analysis covers European wide helicopter
accident data - Preliminary results already provide indication of
type of accidents - Preliminary results will be used by EHSIT
- And shared with IHST
54Concluding remarks
- Main accident factors are operational. The top 3
are - Pilot judgment actions
- Safety management /culture
- Pilot situation awareness
- High correlation with US results
- Different patterns for
- Commercial Air Transport
- Aerial Work
- General Aviation
55Concluding remarks
- HFACS provided a complementary perspective on
these factors and together with SPS, was used to
produce recommendations - The top 3 intervention recommendation categories
are - Flight Operations and Safety Management/Culture
- Regulatory
- Training / Instructional
56Way forward
- EHSAT will continue analysis to complete
2000-2005 timeframe - Intervention recommendations will be handed over
to the implementation team, the EHSIT - EHSIT will be launched after this Conference
- And we would like you to join
57 Thank you for your attention Questions?