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Join Us At 0900ET, Friday, 4/10, for the LIVE Morning Brief.
Watch It LIVE at
www.airborne-live.net

Mon, Jan 05, 2004

It May Not Have Been The Most Profitable Of Years

But It Was The Safest

While 2003 wasn't the year everybody made money in aviation, it was certainly the safest on record -- at least, as far as commercial aviation is concerned. Twenty-five commercial aircraft were involved in fatal accidents last year -- 26-percent lower than the previous record, set in 2001.

"It's amazing," said Harro Ranter, president of the Dutch organization Aviation Safety Network, in an interview with Knight Ridder Newspapers. "It was most definitely the safest year for airline passengers in the world."

It's the continuation of a trend, says Ranter. Thirty years ago, there were an average 61 fatal commercial aircraft incidents a year. That dropped to 52 in the '80s and 48 in the 90s.

"A lot of the things that we have done over the past decade are paying off," said Eric Doten, director of the Center for Aerospace Safety/Security Education at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach (FL). He says better training and better technology have paved the way toward safer flight.

The improved numbers are evident when you look at incidents that occur on approach and landing. Just five years ago, the number of fatal accidents attributed to aircraft that wend down on approach was 16. Eight fatal accidents occurred upon landing. This year there were eight fatal incidents on approach and -- get this -- none upon landing.

"We're having extraordinary success," Dorr said.

Twenty-three of the 25 fatal commercial flights were foreign -- only two were in the US. The first occurred January 8th, 2003 (above), when an Air Midwest flight crashed on take-off from Charlotte Douglas International (NC). The second happened August 26th on Cape Cod.

And, yeah, we had to throw this last fact in: Compared to the 677 people who died in commercial aviation accidents worldwide last year, consider this: an average of 820 people a week die in car wrecks -- in the US alone.

FMI: www.faa.gov

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