(28 June 2022, 10:45 +07)
IATA is urging governments to work closely with
the airline and related industries to ensure that aviation and
incumbent aviation safety systems can safely co-exist with new 5G
services.
While IATA recognizes the economic importance of
making spectrum available to support next generation commercial
wireless telecommunications, maintaining current levels of safety
of passengers, flight crews and aircraft must continue to be one
of governments’ highest priorities.
“We must not repeat the recent experience in the
United States, where the rollout of C-band spectrum 5G services
created enormous disruption to aviation, owing to the potential
risk of interference with radio altimeters that are critical to
aircraft landing and safety systems,” said Willie Walsh, IATA’s
Director General. “In fact, many countries have successfully
managed to facilitate the requirements of 5G service providers,
while including necessary mitigations to preserve aviation safety
and uninterrupted services. These include, for example, Brazil,
Canada, France and Thailand.”
British Airways B777 reg: G-YMMU. Picture by Steven Howard of TravelNewsAsia.com
Before deciding on any spectrum allocations or
conducting spectrum auctions, IATA called for governments to
ensure close coordination and mutual understandings between
national spectrum and aviation safety regulators so that each
frequency allocation/assignment is comprehensively studied and is
proven not to adversely impact aviation safety and efficiency.
Robust testing in coordination with aviation subject matter
experts is critically important in providing necessary
information.
Measures that have already been used by some
governments include:
- Ensure thorough testing, sufficient spectrum
separation between 5G C-band deployments and 4.2-4.4 GHz frequency
band used by existing radio altimeters.
- Clearly codify and enforce the maximum power
limit for 5G C-band transmission and downward tilting of 5G
antennae particularly in the vicinity of flight paths.
- Establishment of sufficient 5G C-band
prohibition and precautionary zones around airports.
IATA noted that airlines operating to/from and
within the US continue to contend with the effects of the rollout
of 5G, including a pending airworthiness directive from the
Federal Aviation Administration requiring them to retrofit/upgrade
radio altimeters at their own expense to enable the respective
aircraft to continue to utilize CAT II and CAT III low-visibility
approaches at many US airports where 5G C-Band service is
currently or will be deployed in future.
The timely availability
of upgraded altimeters is a concern, as are the cost of these
investments and the lack of certainty regarding the future
spectrum environment. Furthermore, 19 additional
telecommunications companies are scheduled to deploy 5G networks
by December 2023.
“FAA’s unilateral decision to require airlines to
replace or upgrade their existing radio altimeters – which are
approved by both the FAA and the US Federal Communications
Commission – by July 2023 is deeply disappointing and
unrealistic,” said Walsh. “The FAA has not even approved or
certified all the safety solutions that it will require, nor have
systems providers been able to say with certainty when the
equipment will be available for much of the fleet. So how can
there be any confidence in the timeline? Furthermore, FAA can
provide no guarantee that airlines will not have to carry out
further upgrades to radio altimeters as even more powerful 5G
networks are deployed in the near future. Safety is our highest
priority, but it cannot be achieved with this rushed approach. The
FAA needs to continue working with all stakeholders
collaboratively and transparently, including the FCC and the
telecom sector, to define solutions and deadlines that reflect
reality.”
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