

European pilots welcome the comprehensive accident investigation report on the 2011 accident at Cork Airport, which took the lives of 6 people, including both pilots. The investigation identifies not only a probable cause of the accident but looks beneath the surface and uncovers some fundamental failings in Europe’s aviation safety environment.
“In the past years, many in our industry kept reassuring themselves that aviation has never been safer before,” says Nico Voorbach, ECA President and an active pilot himself. “This report is a much needed wake-up call to pay attention to the growing number of signs that there are deeply rooted operational, organisational and regulatory deficiencies in the aviation sector to be addressed.”
After an in-depth investigation, the Irish Air Accident Investigation Unit (AAIU) identified loss of control during an attempted go-around as the probable cause of the fatal accident. Along with that, it points at several significant contributing factors such as superficial oversight by aviation authorities, breach of existing aviation regulation by operators and company owners, insufficient pilot training, pilot fatigue and other operational and organisational deficiencies.
Among the report’s conclusions are:
“The string of events described in this report makes it clear that the aviation safety system has blatantly failed,” says Philip von Schöppenthau, ECA Secretary General. “Lack of oversight at various levels, inadequate training, intricate relationships between aircraft owner and different undertakings are a worrying mix. The problem is that this mix is spreading quickly in some parts of the industry, whereas oversight authorities are less and less able to keep pace and oversee operations that become very complex and hard to track.”
The accident investigation report contains 11 safety recommendations to EASA, the European Commission, the Operator, the Spanish Civil Aviation Authority and ICAO. “We welcome the thorough work done by the Irish investigation authority and call on the national and European authorities to step up their efforts,” says Pete Kaumanns, ECA Technical Affairs Board Director. “The accident shows why adhering solely to the letter of the law – if at all – and not its spirit is insufficient. Also without adequate regulation and proper safety oversight, such accidents are bound to happen again.”
Download Press Release (pdf) | Download AAIU Accident Investigation Report
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For further information, please contact:
Nico Voorbach, ECA President, Tel: +32 491 378 982
Philip von Schöppenthau, ECA Secretary General, Tel: +32 2 705 32 93
Note to editors: ECA is the representative body of European pilot associations, representing over 38.000 pilots from across Europe. Website: www.eurocockpit.be.