Title: AIR LINE PILOTS ASSOCIATION INTERNATIONAL ALPA
1AIR LINE PILOTS ASSOCIATION INTERNATIONAL ALPA
- JOHN OBRIEN
- Director
- Engineering Air Safety Department
2ALPA
- 64,000 MEMBERS
- Flying for 42 Airlines in U.S. and Canada
- Representing Domestic/International/Pax/Cargo
- Member, International Federation of Air Line
Pilots Associations - IFALPA
3AREAS OF DISCUSSION
- ALPA APPROACH
- EDUCATION
- TRAINING
- OUTREACH
4VOLCANIC ASHMulti-Faceted Approach
- Twenty-plus Years of Progress
- Helped Identify and Categorize Damages
- Promoted Operational Awareness
- Promoted Research and Development
- Promoted Improved Detection Capabilities
- Helped to Improve and Coordinate Global
Communications - Working on Education Program
5VOLCANIC ASH Education and Training
- No Innocent Ash cloud
- Detection and Warning Limited in Scope
- Fundamental 1st step Avoidance
- Appropriate Reactions if Ash is Encountered
- Procedures to Minimize Impact of Encounter
- Understand, some damage inevitable
- Examples of Materials for Academics
6VOLCANIC ASHMaterials for Academics
- US Geological Survey (USGS) Bulletin 2047 -
Volcanic Ash and Aviation Safety Proceedings of
the First International Symposium on Volcanic
Ash and Aviation Safety, Edited by Thomas J.
Casadevall, Washington, DC, 1994
7VOLCANIC ASH Materials for Academics
- International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO)
Doc. 9691-AN/954 Manual on Volcanic Ash,
Radioactive Material, and Toxic Chemical Clouds,
First Edition 2001
8VOLCANIC ASH Materials for Academics
- US Geological Survey (USGS) World Map of
Volcanoes and Principal Aeronautical Features, by
Thomas J. Casadevall and Theodore B. Thompson,
Prepared in cooperation with Jeppesen Sanderson,
Inc., 1995
9VOLCANIC ASH Materials for Academics
- FAA Aviation Safety Journal Reprint, The Volcano
Threat to Aviation Safety, Washington, DC, 1991
10VOLCANIC ASH Materials for Academics
- US Geological Survey (USGS) Open-File Report
93-518, Volcanic Ash and Airports Discussions
and Recommendations from the Workshop on Impacts
of Volcanic Ash on Airport Facilities, by Thomas
J. Casadevall, Seattle, WA, April 26-28, 1993
11VOLCANIC ASH Materials for Academics
- Aeronautical Information Manual (AIM), Volcanic
Activity Reporting Form (VAR), 2004
12VOLCANIC ASHEducation and Training
- Dispersion Path
- Difficult to model forecast
- Critical to define footprint
- Airport Contamination
- Equipment damage
- Runway surface effects
13VOLCANIC ASHEducation and Training
- Key Elements
- Detection Seismic, satellite, visual
- Path prediction Environmental winds, forecast
algorithms - Communications Interagency intergovernmental
- Difficulties
- Areas often remote North Atlantic and North
Pacific - Night Lightly populated, no seismic monitoring
- Lack of lead time Minimal communications
14VOLCANIC ASHOutreachResearch and Development
- Detection Satellite Sensor Improvements
- Resolution hot spots
- Day/night/all weather
- Effective alert/action network