Data Reveal A Continued Downward Trend In Accident Rate
The AOPA Air Safety Foundation recently published its 2004 Nall
Report, an annual comprehensive compilation of general aviation
(GA) accident statistics. The latest edition reveals an overall
increase in GA accidents for 2003 as compared to 2002, but a
continued downward trend in the accident rate. Preliminary numbers
indicate that trend continued throughout 2004.
According to the report, total accidents in 2003 rose by 1.5
percent, while flight hours increased by 0.6 percent when compared
to the previous year. The result was a slight increase in the
accident rate, from 6.69 accidents per 100,000 flight hours in 2002
to 6.77 in 2003.
"Measuring accident rates in hundredths implies a level of
accuracy in the system that doesn't exist," said ASF Executive
Director Bruce Landsberg. To gain a clearer understanding of the
data, ASF reviews the trends as well.
The ten-year data trend shows that the accident rate has
decreased from 9.08 accidents per 100,000 flight hours in 1994 to
6.77 in 2003. Additionally, the fatal accident rate has decreased
from 1.81 in 1994 to 1.37 in 2003.
"We study the trends to get a more accurate perspective on the
data," said Landsberg. "A single year may contain anomalies that
skew the statistics, but trend information provides a better
long-term picture."
Preliminary information for 2004 indicates that the downward
trend will continue. The accident rate decreased from 6.77 per
100,000 flight hours in 2003 to 6.22 in 2004, making it the safest
year yet.
For 2003, most GA accidents -- 79.4 percent -- were non-fatal
and 75.8 percent were pilot-related. Of those, the causes were
nearly identical to those of previous years.
"The accident causes we review each
year are not new," said Landsberg. "In 2003, takeoff, maneuvering,
and weather were again among the top fatal accident producers."
Takeoffs and landings accounted for more than 50 percent of all
GA accidents in 2003. The largest number of pilot-related fatal
accidents, 25 percent, resulted from maneuvering flight.
The Nall Report has a new format this year, making it easier to
locate class-specific information. Single-engine fixed-gear,
single-engine retractable-gear, and multiengine aircraft are
separated into individual sections, each containing all of the
accident information for that class of aircraft.
Continuing its safety education efforts, the AOPA Air Safety
Foundation included a special emphasis section on fuel management
accidents this year. There were 147 of these accidents in 2003, or
nearly three per week. From 2002 to 2003, fuel management accidents
increased 22.5 percent.
The foundation's annual Nall Report is a detailed analysis of
the previous year's GA accidents involving fixed-wing aircraft
weighing less than 12,500 pounds. The report is named for former
NTSB member and GA advocate Joseph T. Nall, who died as a passenger
in a charter airplane crash in Venezuela in 1989.