Aviation Week & Space Technology - 3 November 2014

(Axel Boer) #1
should still have
4,000 flight hours
left and pass their
borescope and
EGT tests.”
Clarke says the
global regulatory
environment also makes lease return
more difcult. “Europe has air trafc
control equipage requirements, others
don’t. China requires head-up displays.
These are high-cost modifications.”

Owners pay for these modifications,
but they are most efciently done dur-
ing redelivery checks, another reason
for collaborative planning by lessor
and lessee.

Different aviation authorities seek
diferent documents and follow difer-
ent procedures. “Some let aircraft come
into their country on a temporary reg-
istration, then do a full inspection when
it arrives,” Clarke says. “Others come
in and do a week of inspection in the
exporting country, which causes head-
aches.” Like Ryan, Clarke sees diferent
inspection approaches used even by
staf within the same country.
Clarke believes globally accepted
digital documentation would help
“hugely” in easing burdens. European
carriers are moving ahead with digi-
tized records, but China and South-
east Asia, the fastest-growing aviation
markets, lag behind. “We are running
a hybrid system of paper and digital
records now and not saving money. But
we must standardize first, then digi-
tize.” Santos Dumont is working with
IATA on standardization and digitiza-
tion, but Clarke is not sure things will
change much in the next 5-10 years.
Tony Diaz, president of CIT Com-
mercial Air, cites different national
regulatory requirements for mainte-
nance, technical status and records as
a major cost driver. Just reviewing new
national requirements before transfer
takes time and money and makes tran-
sitions more difcult. Uniform regula-
tion would ease transfers, he argues.
EASA and FAA are more closely
aligned than authorities elsewhere, “but
even these are not perfectly synchro-
nized,” Diaz notes. Diferent document
needs flow from diferent requirements
or enforcement methods. Aligning re-
quirements and enforcement would
thus remove this problem.
Diaz says it is unfortunate there is
still no standardized, digitized record
template. “It’s on the way and overdue.
This area cries out for standardization.”
Lacking standard templates, all parties
require documenting everything to
avoid risks when moving assets.
Diaz urges the industry to move
toward clearly defined international
regulations—one template for docu-
ments and one standard for parts. But
he expects the path will be a long one. c

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OPERATIONS

Peach Airlines leases this Airbus
A320 from GE Capital Aviation
Services.

AIRBUS/P.MASCLET

Tap here in the digital MRO edition
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