Eurocontrol
Formation | 1960[1] |
---|---|
Headquarters | Brussels, Belgium |
Membership | 41 member states |
Budget | € 505.8 million Euros (as of 2014)[2] |
Employees | 1945 (as of 2014)[2] |
Website |
The European Organisation for the Safety of Air Navigation, commonly known as Eurocontrol, is an international organisation working to achieve safe and seamless air traffic management across Europe. Founded in 1960, Eurocontrol currently has 41 member states and is headquartered in Brussels, Belgium. The organization employees approximately two thousand people and operates with an annual budget in excess of half a billion Euros.[2]
Although Eurocontrol is not an agency of the European Union, the EU has delegated parts of its Single European Sky regulations to Eurocontrol, making it the central organization for coordination and planning of air traffic control for all of Europe.[3] The EU itself is a signatory of Eurocontrol and all EU member states are presently also members of Eurocontrol.[4] The organization works with national authorities, air navigation service providers, civil and military airspace users, airports, and other organisations. Its activities involve all gate-to-gate air navigation service operations: strategic and tactical flow management, controller training, regional control of airspace, safety-proofed technologies and procedures, and collection of air navigation charges.
History
The Eurocontrol Convention was signed in 1960 and ratified in 1963. Before the Convention entered into force in 1963, there were already indications that the matter of national sovereignty would complicate the full implementation of the organization’s founding mission. The first European plan for a harmonized air traffic control (ATC) system, proposed in 1962, was beset by the refusal of both France and Britain to comply, largely due to reasons closely linked with their national military airspace control. The other four original members (the Federal Republic of Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg) agreed in 1964 to set up a single international air traffic control center to manage their upper airspace, settling in the Dutch city of Maastricht.[5]
The European Parliament at the time expressed concern about the lack of clear intergovernmental agreements to ensure common air traffic control services across the continent. In 1979, Eurocontrol signed a working cooperation agreement with the European Commission, attempting to create a synergy of Eurocontrol’s technical expertise and EU’s regulatory authorities. Several initiatives originating in this period become a lasting element of the organization, such as the Eurocontrol forecasting service, which became STATFOR, as well as the Aeronautical Information Service. By 1986, the pressures on the European ATC network was so big that a new, wider mandate was already being considered for Eurocontrol, with much of the initiative coming from ECAC’s Ministers of Transport. Subsequently, ECAC urged all of its member states to join Eurocontrol.[5]
A revised Eurocontrol Convention was signed in 1997, renewing the organization’s optimism for greater political support, surpassing the original vision of the 1960 Convention. In June 1998, Eurocontrol, the European Space Agency (ESA) and the European Commission (EC) also signed an agreement formalizing cooperation in the realm of satellite navigation systems and services. In 1999 the European Commission presented its plan for a Single European Sky (SES) to the European Parliament, followed by two High Level Groups (HLG). The HLG reports on SES led to the establishment of the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) and reinforced the European Commission’s role as the sole European aviation safety regulator, while acknowledging Eurocontrol’s technical expertise in the implementation of said regulations.[5]
The early 2000s were marred by several fatal accidents in Europe, such as the 2001 Linate Airport disaster and the 2002 Überlingen mid-air collision, both of which were related to air traffic navigation shortcomings. The pressure was further compounded by the September 11 attacks, increasing the need for a rapid Europe-wide regulatory and coordinating body. By May 2003, EUROCONTOL and NATO had signed a memorandum of cooperation, followed by a similar memorandum with the European Commission in December 2003. In February 2004, Eurocontrol started work on first mandates from the European Commission and in April 2004, it adopted the Single European Sky Regulations (Package 1). In March 2006, the European Commission’s Single European Sky ATM Research (SESAR) Program was launched by the Stakeholder Consultation Group (SCG) under EUROCONTOL's aegis.[5]
Functions and centres
Eurocontrol provides a set of different services:
- Maastricht Upper Area Control Centre (MUAC)
- Network Manager Operations Centre (NMOC) – coordinates flight plans and actual traffic.
- EAD – centralized access to AIS information.
- Central Route Charges Office (CRCO) – collects en-route (and aerodrome approach) charges on behalf of Air Navigation Service providers (ANSPs).
- Eurocontrol Experimental Centre (EEC) – ATM research, simulations, etc.
- Institute of Air Navigation Services (IANS) – training and e-learning.
- Projects.
- Eurocontrol Safety Regulatory Requirement (ESARRs) – basis requirements for certification and designation according to EC regulation 2096/2005.
Maastricht Upper Area Control Centre
Eurocontrol's Maastricht Upper Area Control Centre (MUAC), located at Maastricht Aachen Airport, provides air traffic control for traffic above 24,500 ft over Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and north-west Germany. A DFS unit, controlling military air traffic over the north-west of Germany, is co-located with the civil facilities. It started operations in 1972.[6]
It is the second busiest upper area Area Control Centre (ACC) in Europe. In Europe, only London centre has more traffic in terms of numbers, but that is caused by a much bigger airspace range (also below 24,500 feet) with many more sectors.
MUAC has put in operation innovative technology and productivity enhancements: a new generation Flight Data Processing System,[7] the Short Term Conflict Alert (STCA), Medium Term Conflict Detection (MTCD), Controller Pilot Data Link Communications (CPDLC) and stripless controller working positions.
Typically, air traffic control sectors at MUAC can handle 55 or more flights per hour. The average flight duration is approximately 18 minutes and typically 60% of the traffic is climbing from or descending to the major European airports of London, Paris, Frankfurt, Amsterdam and Berlin. Maastricht UAC has undoubtedly one of the most complex airspace structures in the world where the traffic flow (up to 5,000+ aircraft a day) can be somewhat disrupted by the many surrounding military airspaces around.
Membership criteria
To be considered for membership of Eurocontrol, a country must meet all of the following criteria:[8]
- Be European
- Member of the Council of Europe
- Have existing accreditation to both ICAO and ECAC
List of members
Member | Since | Notes |
---|---|---|
Austria | 1993 | EU Member |
Belgium | 1960 | EU Member |
Bulgaria | 1997 | EU Member |
Croatia | 1997 | EU Member |
Cyprus | 1991 | EU Member |
Czech Republic | 1996 | EU Member |
Denmark | 1994 | EU Member |
Estonia[9] | 2015 | EU Member |
Finland | 2001 | EU Member |
France | 1960 | EU Member |
Germany | 1960 | EU Member |
Greece | 1988 | EU Member |
Hungary | 1992 | EU Member |
Ireland | 1965 | EU Member |
Italy | 1996 | EU Member |
Latvia | 2011 | EU Member |
Lithuania | 2006 | EU Member |
Luxembourg | 1960 | EU Member |
Malta | 1989 | EU Member |
Netherlands | 1960 | EU Member |
Poland | 2004 | EU Member |
Portugal | 1986 | EU Member |
Romania | 1996 | EU Member |
Slovakia | 1997 | EU Member |
Slovenia | 1995 | EU Member |
Spain | 1997 | EU Member |
Sweden | 1995 | EU Member |
United Kingdom | 1960 | EU Member |
European Union | 2002 | In parallel with member states |
Albania | 2002 | EU Candidate |
Republic of Macedonia | 1998 | EU Candidate |
Montenegro | 2007 | EU Candidate |
Serbia | 2005 | EU Candidate |
Turkey | 1989 | EU Candidate |
Armenia | 2006 | |
Bosnia and Herzegovina | 2004 | |
Moldova | 2000 | |
Monaco | 1997 | |
Norway | 1994 | |
Switzerland | 1992 | |
Ukraine | 2004 | |
Georgia[10] | 2012 |
See also
- Air travel disruption after the 2010 Eyjafjallajökull eruption
- Controlled and Harmonised Aeronautical Information Network (CHAIN)
- European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA)
- European Civil Aviation Conference (ECAC)
- European Cockpit Association
- European Common Aviation Area (ECAA)
- List of the busiest airports in Europe by passenger traffic
- Single European Sky
- SKYbrary
References
- ↑ member states by accession date Eurocontrol.int.
- 1 2 3 Eurocontrol: Annual Report 2014, p. 67
- ↑ Eurocontrol, SES mandate on Standardised European Rules of the Air (SERA) implementing rule for airspace – Part A - COMPLETED, 31 January 2011
- ↑ Eurocontro, Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) on Eurocontrol, Retrieved: 4 May 2016
- 1 2 3 4 John McInally, Eurocontrol - History Book, December 2010
- ↑ Eurocontrol. "Eurocontrol MUAC / About Us". Retrieved 2010-02-06.
- ↑ MUAC'S New generation FDPS
- ↑ Peter Tannhäuser, Head of Legal Service, Eurocontrol: Models for future cooperation, p. 3, Published: 27 November 2013, Retrieved: 4 May 2016
- ↑ "Estonia set to join Eurocontrol".
- ↑ "Georgia became a member of Eurocontrol". gcaa.ge. Civil Aviation Agency of Georgia. Retrieved 9 December 2012.
External links
- Official site
- History of Eurocontrol PDF (375 KiB)
- "Being in control at Eurocontrol", article in Crossroads by Rinnie Oey
- Executive Overview: Jane's Air Traffic Control
- Skyway magazine
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