STRAIGHT TO THE POINT

Similar documents
HungaroControl. More than an Air Navigation Service Provider

DFS Aviation Services GmbH. A brand of experience

Air Traffic Management

A unique training experience TESTED

NATIONAL AIRSPACE POLICY OF NEW ZEALAND

COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING REGULATION (EU)

Welcome to AVI AFRIQUE 2017

Air Traffic Control National Control Authority Liability Insurance Questionnaire Applicant: HungaroControl Hungarian Air Navigation Services

DANUBE FAB real-time simulation 7 November - 2 December 2011

There was consensus among the participants that a strong European aviation industry is critical to ensure the right to

SUSTAINABLE AIR TRANSPORT IN THE FUTURE TEN-T

Single European Sky II

Screening Chapter 14 Transport. Single European Sky (SES) 18 December Transport

SIMULATION OF BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA AIRSPACE

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES. Draft. COMMISSION REGULATION (EU) No /2010

Civil and military integration in the same workspace

Air Traffic & Navigation Services

ENVIRONMENT ACTION PLAN

L 342/20 Official Journal of the European Union

Air Traffic Control National Control Authority Liability Insurance Questionnaire Applicant: HungaroControl Hungarian Air Navigation Services

Single European Sky Awards Submission by the COOPANS Alliance. Short description of the project. (Required for website application)

ICAO EUR Region Civil/Military Cooperation Seminar/Workshop

The Single European Sky and SESAR, the European ATM modernisation programme. Patrick Ky, Executive Director 26 May 2010

Training and licensing of flight information service officers

DFS Deutsche Flugsicherung. A brief portrait of the company

TWENTY-SECOND MEETING OF THE ASIA/PACIFIC AIR NAVIGATION PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION REGIONAL GROUP (APANPIRG/22)

1. Title: Instrumental development of the fire service for disaster prevention and technical rescue

SHORTCUTS TO EFFICIENCY TO FIX YOUR ATM CHALLENGES

MY AGENDA FOR TODAY. Today s Partners for Tomorrows aviation. Page 3

JSPA Initiative FROM AN IDEA TO THE REALITY. THE DANUBE REGION TRANSPORT DAYS Ljubljana, 21 st and 22 nd October 2014

Aviation Engineer / Specialist postgraduate training course

DFS Aviation Services GmbH. A brand of experience. Aviation Services

Maastricht Upper Area. Introducing the next generation of air traffic control. New flight data processing system

TWELFTH AIR NAVIGATION CONFERENCE

EUROCONTROL and the Airport Package

AIRSPACE. Aviation Consultancy at its best. Specialist aviation support to help solve problems for airports and airport developers

Critical Systems and Software Solutions

Remarks of CANSO Director General, Jeff Poole, at the CANSO Asia-Pacific Conference, 5-7 May 2014

The Single European Sky & the SESAR programme

Preparatory Course in Business (RMIT) SIM Global Education. Bachelor of Applied Science (Aviation) (Top-Up) RMIT University, Australia

FACILITATION PANEL (FALP)

Modernising UK Airspace 2025 Vision for Airspace Tools and Procedures. Controller Pilot Symposium 24 October 2018

THE FIRST CHOICE FOR FREQUENT TRAVELERS

TWELFTH AIR NAVIGATION CONFERENCE

EUROCONTROL General Presentation

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION. Developing an EU civil aviation policy towards Brazil

ICAO Young Aviation Professionals Programme

ABOUT TAG AVIATION 2-3 MANAGEMENT OF COMPLEXITY 4-5 OUR AIRCRAFT MANAGEMENT PROGRAMME 6-7 COMPLIANCE PLUS 8-9 DELIVERING MEASURABLE VALUE 10-11

Performance Based Navigation (PBN) Implementation Plan. The Gambia

SEAMLESS SKY IN EUROPE. Carlo Maria Borghini Director Administration and Finance Muscat, OMAN October 2009

Final decision on consistency of the qualification: National Consistency Confirmed

Future ATM - from Asian operator's point of view

NOISE MANAGEMENT BOARD - GATWICK AIRPORT. Review of NMB/ th April 2018

Qualification Details

CASE STUDY Amsterdam Airport Schiphol

The SES Performance Scheme. ICAO Regional Performance Framework Workshop Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan May 2013

SESAR Active ECAC INF07 REG ASP MIL APO USE INT IND NM

182ND SESSION OF THE COUNCIL

Civil Approach Procedural Controller Military Terminal Radar Controller

CIVIL AVIATION REGULATIONS SURINAME PART 17 - AERONAUTICAL TELECOMMUNICATIONS VERSION 5.0

OVERVIEW OF THE FAA ADS-B LINK DECISION

Forty years of vision. The EUROCONTROL Maastricht UAC story. years of vision EUROCONTROL MAASTRICHT UAC EUROCONTROL

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES. Draft. COMMISSION REGULATION (EU) No /

PROPULSION SPARE PARTS

Manitoba Technical-Vocational Curriculum Framework of Outcomes. Grades 9 to 11 Pilot Ground School 2018 Draft

SESAR RPAS Definition Phase Results & Way Forward. Denis Koehl Senior Advisor SESAR Joint Undertaking

Safe Skies for Air Navigation over Africa

Flight Efficiency Initiative

MET matters in SESAR. Dennis HART

(ICAO HQ, Montreal, 27 September, 2016)

Performance through Innovation. Case study: Singapore airspace Enhancing airport performance

Business Plan

ICAO EUR Region Performance Framework

State Aviation Administration of Ukraine

Your success is our goal. Rely on our engineering.

400 SITA members. 35+ AIR TRANSPORT CIOs EASY AIR TRAVEL EVERY STEP OF THE WAY > 2800 CUSTOMERS WORLDWIDE REPRESENTING AIR TRANSPORT BY SECTOR

HungaroControl Csaba GERGELY

USE OF RADAR IN THE APPROACH CONTROL SERVICE

NEFAB Annual Report 2016

SUMMARY REPORT ON THE SAFETY OVERSIGHT AUDIT FOLLOW-UP OF THE CIVIL AVIATION AUTHORITY OF SLOVENIA

STRATEGY OF DEVELOPMENT 2020 OF THE CCI SYSTEM IN UKRAINE

FRAMEWORK LAW ON THE PROTECTION AND RESCUE OF PEOPLE AND PROPERTY IN THE EVENT OF NATURAL OR OTHER DISASTERS IN BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA

The Government s Aviation Strategy Transport for the North (TfN) response

Single European Sky Benefits for the airline industry. Warsaw, 28 November 2011

Network Management, building on our experience of flow management and network planning.

STATEMENT OF THE NATIONAL BUSINESS AVIATION ASSOCIATION ED BOLEN PRESIDENT AND CEO BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON TRANSPORTATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE

EUROCONTROL. Visit of the Transport Attachés. 10 April Frank Brenner. Director General EUROCONTROL

EUROPEAN COMMISSION DIRECTORATE-GENERAL MOBILITY AND TRANSPORT

Official Journal of the European Union L 146/7

Operators may need to retrofit their airplanes to ensure existing fleets are properly equipped for RNP operations. aero quarterly qtr_04 11

ATM STRATEGIC PLAN VOLUME I. Optimising Safety, Capacity, Efficiency and Environment AIRPORTS AUTHORITY OF INDIA DIRECTORATE OF AIR TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT

European Joint Industry CDA Action Plan

Performance Criteria for Assessing Airport Expansion Alternatives for the London Region

Operations Control Centre perspective. Future of airline operations

EN Official Journal of the European Union. (Acts whose publication is obligatory)

TWELFTH AIR NAVIGATION CONFERENCE DRAFT REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON AGENDA ITEM 4

Thales on the Civil Aerospace market

Seychelles Civil Aviation Authority. Telecomm & Information Services Unit

ACI EUROPE POSITION PAPER

ACI EUROPE POSITION. on the revision of. EU DIRECTIVE 2002/30 (noise-related operating restrictions at community airports)

Transcription:

STRAIGHT TO THE POINT

HUNGAROCONTROL STRAIGHT TO THE POINT

CEO s Welcome Dear Reader, The world s air traffi c has rebounded after the recession created by the economic crisis. According to EUROCONTROL data, 9.8 million fl ights were operated in Europe in 2011 and this fi gure may double within the next two decades. This poses huge challenges to air navigation service providers. Capacity utilisation has to be optimised so that the maximum number of aircraft can be controlled safely to their destinations on the shortest possible route, that is, as fast as possible and at the lowest cost. It is the only way to improve the effi ciency of fl ights and sustain the development of air traffi c. We are convinced that this goal can only be achieved via the Single European Sky integration programme, by collaboration, joint deliberation and concerted action. The European States together and individually have to ensure their ability to improve their services regarding capacity, cost-effi ciency and precision, as well as safety and environmental protection. All of these require large-scale developments and investments. HungaroControl is determined to serve the integration with its state-of-the-art technology, its extensive experience in training and simulation, as well as through research and development. Each business decision and joint development in cooperation with our partners is driven by the aim of enabling the Functional Airspace Block consisting of seven Central-European countries (FAB CE) to become one of Europe s best Functional Airspace Blocks. With this in mind, we have carried out signifi cant developments in the past years and plan to accomplish more in the following years. Our publication presents our accomplishments which will hopefully be benefi cial to our customers, airlines and their passengers, as well as our professional partners and the service providers of the Central-European Functional Airspace Block. Kornél Szepessy CEO, HungaroControl 2 HUNGAROCONTROL STRAIGHT TO THE POINT 3

Conductors of flights Civil aviation dates back more than a hundred years in Hungary. Air traffi c control and the international airport near Budapest, commissioned in 1950, had been operated for decades by a single organisation, until they were separated in 2002. As a result of the establishment of Budapest Airport and HungaroControl, air transport became an activity with multiple participants in Hungary, in line with the model adopted widely in global air transport. The Hungarian air navigation service fi rst operated as a separate budgetary institution and then, in 2007, it was transformed into a private limited company with the Hungarian State as its single shareholder. The rights of the founder and owner are exercised by the Minister of National Development. HungaroControl an employer of more than 700 people is one of the most successful state-owned enterprises in Hungary. It operates without budgetary support, in a balanced and profi table way: its annual revenue amounts to nearly HUF 29 billion. HungaroControl s tasks HungaroControl provides navigation services in Hungary s air space and it offers basic and advanced training for air control personnel. Some 600,000 fl ights are controlled by the Company each year, about 80% of which are overfl ights across the territory of Hungary, while some 90,000 fl ights land at or take off from Budapest Liszt Ferenc International Airport. Accordingly, during the busiest periods an aircraft enters Hungary s air space once every 30-40 seconds. The busiest day in HungaroControl s history was 1st August 2010 when 3255 aircraft were handled by the air traffi c controllers in a single day. HungaroControl provides outstanding services for airlines using Hungary s airspace and the work of its highly trained professionals, assisted by world class technological solutions, has earned worldwide recognition. Moreover, HungaroControl also has remarkable traditions in training, simulation, and research and development, on the basis of which, in cooperation with its professional partners, it intends to create Central Europe s dynamically developing air navigation centre in Budapest during the coming years. 4 HUNGAROCONTROL STRAIGHT TO THE POINT 5

Professionals in the air and on the ground HungaroControl guides air traffi c in Hungary s controlled airspace through the tower control unit at Budapest Liszt Ferenc International Airport, the approach control service around the airport, and the area controllers in all other parts of Hungary who are on duty 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. For those fl ying in uncontrolled airspace and for users of the airports near Debrecen and Sármellék, HungaroControl provides fl ight information services. In addition to its air traffi c control activities, the Company performs a variety of other tasks as well. Its airspace management team makes decisions on airspace users requests while the fl ow organisers make sure that the number of aircraft intending to enter Hungarian airspace at any one time does not exceed the number that can be safely controlled with the available human and technical resources. Moreover, HungaroControl is coordinating the optimum utilisation of the capacities of the Ferihegy airport, it provides comprehensive air traffi c information for fl ights as they are landing or taking off and it supplies real-time weather information for pilots. World class technology HungaroControl carries out its tasks with the aid of cutting edge technical facilities and technologies. Hungarian air traffi c controllers are organising Hungary s air traffi c using the MATIAS system, a technology developed by HungaroControl from Europe s leading navigation software, which has become the world s most up-to-date controlling and information system. Complex radar systems installed in Budapest, Kőrishegy and Püspökladány upgraded between 2006 and 2008 with EU co-fi nancing provide for the controlling of the air space and for the exact identifi cation of the positions of aircraft. Moreover, a system controlling and directing movements on the ground guarantees the safety of air traffi c at the Ferihegy airport. Air navigation is supported by a variety of communication systems, in addition HungaroControl is also running a considerable number of weather stations and a meteorological information system. The Hungarian air navigation service has launched a number of large-scale investment projects in order to retain its technical advantage. It is successfully achieving this by applying innovative solutions and by continuing to raise the standards of its air navigation services. 6 HUNGAROCONTROL STRAIGHT TO THE POINT 7

Single European Sky Among the best in Europe Precision, cost effectiveness and reliability: these are the key quality indicators distinguishing one air navigation service provider from another all over the world. These three criteria supplemented with environmental protection underlie the performance objectives for all European service providers to be met by 2014. HungaroControl already meets the main quality criteria prescribed by the European Union. In year 2011 the Company caused not a single second of delay to airline companies or passengers. Its fl ight safety indicators have also earned international recognition. The Company is also among the best in terms of cost effi ciency as its route unit rates are signifi cantly lower than the European average. By implementing the free route concept under which pilots can determine where to enter and where to exit from the airspace it shortens the length of the routes covered by fl ights. This approach is not only in line with the interests of airlines and passengers but it also contributes to sustainable development in air transport and to the protection of the environment. Air transport has developed into a form of public transport: in 2011 as many as 9.8 million fl ights took place in Europe and the number of fl ights may even double by 2030. Driven by passengers and airlines requirements, in order to ensure effi cient and smooth management of the growing traffi c, the European Union has worked out the Single European Sky programme. The effi ciency of air traffi c control can be improved through standardising and harmonising the supervision of air spaces, by improving coordination between member states and by increasing the utilisation of the available capacities. This has been demonstrated by the example of the United States of America; in an air space more or less the same size as Europe, with less airspace sectors and less than a third of the control centres in Europe, some 70 percent more fl ights are controlled. The goal of the Single European Sky programme is to signifi cantly improve the effi ciency and competitiveness of air traffi c control in the Continent. With this in mind, the work of the national air navigation services is to be more closely coordinated and the airspace, still divided along state borders, is to be integrated in larger regional units referred to as functional air space blocks. 8 HUNGAROCONTROL STRAIGHT TO THE POINT 9

10 HUNGAROCONTROL STRAIGHT TO THE POINT 11

FAB CE Tuned to cooperation At present, international fl ights are being passed from one national air navigation service provider to the next along their routes, however, this system greatly contributes to delays and it increases the route length, thereby raising kerosene consumption. One of the basic concepts of the Single European Sky programme is that air transport can be more effi ciently organised, controlled and supervised if navigation is not aligned to state borders but to the fl ow of traffi c. This is the basis of the regional system dividing Europe s air space into nine functional air space blocks. HungaroControl s strategy The implementation of the Single European Sky raises completely new challenges for air traffi c controllers. The creation of the functional air space blocks demands coordination of the technologies and closer than ever cooperation between controllers. It also entails changes in a variety of procedures and processes. The increasing traffi c and integration are also generating an increasing demand in education, research and development and simulation, while there is only a limited supply of suitable capacities across the whole of Europe. With its new strategy covering the next period up to 2015, HungaroControl is responding to the challenges with a complex company development concept. The three underlying pillars of the concept include optimising the operations of the Company, further developing the air traffi c services and the infrastructure, as well as creating an international knowledge centre for training, research and development and simulation. HungaroControl aims to ensure that the Central European functional air space block is put in place and is operated at the highest possible standards, and that HungaroControl s support of the professional development of the region and the outstanding quality of its services also contribute to the increasing international recognition of Hungary s air traffi c control. HungaroControl, Hungary s air navigation service provider is a member of the Functional Airspace Block Central Europe (FAB CE), together with the Austrian, Czech, Slovak, Croatian, Slovenian and Bosnian service providers. The international agreement setting the framework for cooperation was signed on 5 May 2011 in Slovenia. HungaroControl is an active member of the FAB CE community, contributing to its success with its initiatives. 12 13

ANS III State-of-the-art technology in Budapest HungaroControl contributes to the improvement of the air transport infrastructure of Hungary and of the Central European region, by its new control centre of nearly 10,000 square metres and the most up-to-date technology. The total value of the investment project is HUF 13 billion, 85 percent of which is fi nanced by HungaroControl s own resources. The European Union contributes an amount of nearly EUR 6 million through the Trans-European Transport Network Development Plan. As the latest milestone in the implementation of the complex service development programme, the building of the new air traffi c control centre referred to as ANS III was completed in August 2012. From early 2013, the personnel of the Hungarian air navigation service will be controlling fl ights in the Hungarian airspace from this new centre. With its control centre equipped with the most up-to-date navigation technology and communication systems, HungaroControl is one of the leading air traffi c services of the region in terms of its technical and technological standards. 14 15

MATIAS HungaroControl s own development at the lead The replacement of the hardware facilities of the new control centre enabled HungaroControl to install the latest version of its air navigation information software called MATIAS - which has been continuously developed since 2004, and which has been made ever more effi cient and effective by more than 200 new features to date. MATIAS is today one of the most up-to-date software systems in the world, the fi rst one ever to be capable of processing information downloaded from aircraft onboard computers and displaying it to the controllers (Mode S technology). HungaroControl s and Thales Air Systems joint development earned great international recognition, some of its elements have also been adopted or are planned to be introduced by other air navigation service providers. Instead of the formerly applied so-called SSR code, the upgraded MATIAS system uses radio call signals transmitted from aircraft for identifying the various individual airplanes and for matching the position in space to the given fl ight route plan. The new call signal based identifi cation scheme will be mandatory across the whole of the continent by 2020. As the fi rst air navigation service provider in Central and Eastern Europe, HungaroControl is already using the new method. Another new feature of the system is that it will be able to display distance to go information on the basis of the momentary position of an aircraft and its updated fl ight route plan. Moreover, the upgraded version of MATIAS is using the newly required fl ight plan format. HungaroControl will continue the development of the MATIAS system even after moving into the new ANS III building. ANS I Dynamically developing knowledge centre After the delivery of the new control centre, HungaroControl will refurbish the currently used ANS I building, equipping it with cutting edge technology to make sure that it is always available for air controllers as a reserve centre. This will make it possible to create Central Europe s only training and simulation centre under the aegis of HungaroControl, where any air traffi c situation can be simulated in a technical environment identical to the functional operating room, in real time and with real data. Moreover, the ANS I facility will accommodate HungaroControl s threedimensional tower and radar simulator, enhanced to 360 degree vision. The construction of the new ANS III control centre and the continued development of the MATIAS system guarantee the long-term improvement of the Hungarian air navigation service, enabling HungaroControl to retain its technical advantage and laying down the groundwork for the development of its core business. In addition, the refurbished ANS I centre provides unparalleled training and simulation possibilities for Hungarian professionals and those from the region, contributing to the expansion of HungaroControl s service portfolio and to the achievement of its strategic objective, that is, the creation of an international air navigation knowledge centre. 16 HUNGAROCONTROL STRAIGHT TO THE POINT 17

CRDS international simulation centre The first of HungaroControl s projects in training, research and development, and simulation is the airspace simulation centre referred to as the Centre of Research, Development and Simulation (CRDS). Simulations that are indispensable for the development of the airspace structure and air traffic control, as well as to validate the theoretically safe navigation techniques and airspace modifications worked out on paper. Also for working out new techniques and instruments and for the continuous training of air traffic controllers that can be executed with the help of the most up-to-date technologies in the innovation centre inaugurated on 10 May 2011. 18 8 Th There iis only l one e simulation i l i centre with i h similarly i il rl hi high h capacity i and d level of development, near Paris, under the aegis m g of EUROCONTROL. HungaroControl ss facility provides world class te technical background, an international knowledge base and ample available capacity, v as well as the possibility for cooperation for all air traffic services, o professional and of the d scientific organisations and researchers e Central European carried out n region. In addition to the assignments s for HungaroControl, the first large-scale international joint undertaking t a took place in the e spring of 2012 in the framework o of an airspace modifi cation simulation exercise for the Croatian modification a service provider. HUNGAROCONTROL STRAIGHT TO THE POINT 19

Entry Point Central international training academy HungaroControl, together with Entry Point North the training centre of the Swedish, the Danish and the Norwegian air traffi c services opened a joint air navigation academy called Entry Point Central in 2011 in Budapest. In terms of professional content and training techniques, training in Scandinavia represents the highest standards in the world. Entry Point Central (EPC) in Budapest provides the same competitive knowledge, highly effective form of training and qualifi cations of high international prestige for the future generations of Hungarian air traffi c controllers. One novel feature in comparison to the previous training system is that students can acquire practical knowledge from an early stage of training: already from the fi fth week of the training programme they have access to EPC s simulator, and they are taken for training fl ights with Wizz Air, where they can view events taking place in the cockpit live. The members of the fi rst class completing their training received their diplomas in July 2012. The English language training fully meets the expectations and requirements of EUROCONTROL the top organisation of air traffi c control in Europe thus from 2013 the air traffi c academy will be open to trainees from other countries as well. NATO assignment and the opening of airspace over Kosovo The North Atlantic Council called on Hungary on 13 April 2012 to open the high airspace over Kosovo and to control traffi c in that airspace this task will be carried out in late 2013 if all necessary conditions are met. The organisation of airspace control is not a political undertaking, rather, it is a strictly technical task, as commissioned by NATO. This commissioning is only of a temporary nature, it will last only until some other country or air traffi c service obtains authorisation to take over air traffi c control under an agreement concluded in the meantime. This assignment is a major accomplishment for Hungary s diplomacy and for HungaroControl, which will contribute to the effi cient utilisation of the airspace of the region, the shortening of fl ight routes and to the cutting of fuel costs together with the reduction of pollutant emissions. As one of the most highly recognised and most dynamically developing air traffi c services in the Central European region, HungaroControl has the necessary expertise and professionals for this task and it is also technically and technologically suitable to remotely control this sector. 20 HUNGAROCONTROL STRAIGHT TO THE POINT 21

Innovation and science Besides supporting a number of other higher education institutions, HungaroControl has been sponsoring and working with the Budapest University of Technology and Economics for years. This cooperation has resulted in the development of a piece of equipment for testing radars and a special analytical software product. The RadarTester equipment provides an early indication of technical malfunctions of various primary radar facilities. The Flight Profi le Generator, identifi es the fl ight route covered by aircraft as precisely as possible by eliminating the imperfections stemming from the operating principles of radar systems, it then displays corrected data in an animated form. The software helps improve fl ight safety and the training of air traffi c controllers by proper analysis of actual confl ict situations and real incidents. These innovations were presented by HungaroControl in March 2011 at the world air traffi c exhibition in Amsterdam, where a number of European and overseas organisations expressed their interest in the new Hungarian products. Corporate Social Responsibility with responsibility for the future The operations of HungaroControl are guided by the principles of sustainable development and the norms of ethics. As a responsible enterprise the Company pays particular attention to the expectations of society and it actively contributes to the solving of local and global problems, making efforts to maintain good relationships with local residents and municipal governments. The Social Responsibility Programme of the Hungarian air navigation service is based on the recognition that as a responsible employer and market participant, HungaroControl has a sense of responsibility for the social and the natural environment. For this reason the Company makes a point of supporting and contributing to the improvement of the living conditions of the local communities in its area of operations, to the protection of their residential environment, their sporting activities and the development of their cultural life. Moreover, to the extent permitted by its resources, the Company also contributes to the resolving of problems affecting its wider social environment. Moreover, HungaroControl supports the university s scientifi c activities by providing funding and by donating equipment. 22 23

Contact us HungaroControl Hungarian Air Navigation Services Pte. Ltd. Co Address: H-1185 Budapest, Igló utca 33-35. Mailing address: H-1675 Budapest, P.O. Box 80 Phone: +36 1 293 4444 Fax: +36 1 293 4343 E-mail: info@hungarocontrol.hu www.hungarocontrol.hu