List of World Safest Airlines
AirlineRatings.com the world’s only safety and product rating website
has announced its top ten safest airlines for 2013 from the 448 it
monitors.
first on the lead is Qantas which has a fatality free record in the jet era (since 1951). Making up the top ten with seven stars for safety and in- flight product are in alphabetical order: Air New Zealand, All Nippon Airways, Cathay Pacific Airways, Emirates, Etihad Airways, Eva Air, Royal Jordanian, Singapore Airlines and Virgin Atlantic.
Some factors they consider are audits from aviation’s governing bodies and lead associations as well as government audits and the airline’s fatality record.
Of the 448 airlines surveyed 137 have the top seven-star safety ranking, but almost 50 have just three stars or less.
Ten Best Airlines *
Qantas
Air New Zealand
Emirates
Etihad
Cathay Pacific
Singapore Airlines
Virgin Atlantic
EVA Air
All Nippon Airways
Royal Jordanian
* Rated seven stars for safety and product.
Source
Qantas, Boeing and Craig Murray
first on the lead is Qantas which has a fatality free record in the jet era (since 1951). Making up the top ten with seven stars for safety and in- flight product are in alphabetical order: Air New Zealand, All Nippon Airways, Cathay Pacific Airways, Emirates, Etihad Airways, Eva Air, Royal Jordanian, Singapore Airlines and Virgin Atlantic.
Some factors they consider are audits from aviation’s governing bodies and lead associations as well as government audits and the airline’s fatality record.
Of the 448 airlines surveyed 137 have the top seven-star safety ranking, but almost 50 have just three stars or less.
Qantas was the first international airline to operate
around world service with its Lockheed Super Constellations in 1958 and
the first to take delivery of the Boeing 707 outside the US in 1959.
The Australian airline was also amongst the first to
pioneer technical breakthroughs such as long range operations for
twin-engine planes and the development of the Future Air Navigation
System.
Qantas was a leader in using the Flight Data Recorder to monitor plane and later crew performance in 1962. Only six parameters were available unlike today’s FDRs which monitor 500 on the most advanced planes.
Qantas was a leader in using the Flight Data Recorder to monitor plane and later crew performance in 1962. Only six parameters were available unlike today’s FDRs which monitor 500 on the most advanced planes.
Qantas has also been a leader in a wide variety of
recent cockpit innovations such as automatic landings using Global
Navigation Satellite System as well as precision approaches around
mountains in cloud. Dubbed GLS and RNP these technologies are cutting
edge.
Qantas was the lead airline with real time monitoring of
its engines across its fleet using Satellite Communications, which has
enabled the airline to detect problems before they become a major safety
issues.
And 2013 was the safest for flying since 1945, with only 269 deaths from 29 accidents.
According to the Aviation Safety Network the results are well below the 10-year average of 32 accidents and 719 fatalities.
The worst accident was the crash of a Tatarstan Boeing
737-500 operating Flight U9-363 from Moscow to Kazan, which killed all
44 passengers and six crew aboard. The 737-500 was on its second
approach to land in strong winds on November 17 and was about to go
around for a third time when it hit the runway and exploded in flames.
Tatarstan, a small regional airline from central Russia
has not completed the critical International Air Transport Association
Operational Safety Audit (IOSA). Airlines that have completed IOSA have a
safety record 77 per cent better than those which have not.
On October 17, 49 passengers and crew lost their lives
when a Lao Airlines ATR72 crashed while on approach to Pakse in Laos.
Flight QV301 left Vientiane almost four hours late because of bad
weather at the destination airport. It took off at 2.45pm local time and
on descent to land hit a severe rain squall associated with tropical
storm Nari which had battered the Philippines.
Like Tatarstan, Lao Airlines was only rated as a
four-star (out of seven) airline by AirlineRatings.com in part because
it had not completed IOSA. Other major airlines in SE-Asia that have not
completed IOSA include; Air Bagan; Cebu Pacific; Lion Air and Merpati
Air.
The most miraculous escape was for the 304 passengers
and crew that walked away from the spectacular crash of the Asiana
Boeing 777 at San Francisco International Airport in July. Only three
passengers died, when the Boeing 777 hit the runway sea wall and flipped
over.
Ten Best Airlines *
Qantas
Air New Zealand
Emirates
Etihad
Cathay Pacific
Singapore Airlines
Virgin Atlantic
EVA Air
All Nippon Airways
Royal Jordanian
* Rated seven stars for safety and product.
Source
Qantas, Boeing and Craig Murray
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