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Larry Dighera
July 19th 07, 04:31 PM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19806380/
"Although all airline pilots are trained to the same standards ...
there are certain intangibles that only come from experience,"
said Patrick Smith, a U.S.-based airline pilot and aviation
writer. "(Like) skill and a solid familiarity with airline
operations."

The pilot shortage is relatively recent. It is the result of
extraordinary air traffic growth in the Persian Gulf, China and
India; the rise of lucrative low-cost carriers in Europe and Asia;
and the sustained recovery of the U.S. airlines from the industry
recession caused by the 9/11 attacks.

"There is a giant sucking sound, luring pilots to rapidly
expanding airlines such as Emirates and Qatar and the budget
carriers," said William Voss, head of the Flight Safety
Foundation.

"The result is that experienced pilots from developing countries
in Asia and Africa are leaving in droves for places like the Gulf,
and (those nations) are left with no choice but to recruit pilots
fresh out of flight school."

[...]

In Europe, Belgium's largest carrier Brussels Airlines recently
complained of losing an average of 10 captains a month to
pilot-hungry airlines in the Gulf, and have requested government
intervention.

In the United States, where thousands of veterans were laid off
after 9/11 and left the industry, regional carriers have been
giving jobs to first officers with considerably less experience
than would have been required 15 years ago.

At some airlines, such as Northwest, pilot shortages have led to
record-breaking flight cancellations in recent months. In the last
full week of June, it canceled about 1,200 flights, or about 12
percent of its flight schedule. After that, the airline said it
would continue recalling all of its furloughed pilots and hire
additional pilots.

Figures released by International Air Transport Association show
that global air travel will likely grow 4-5 percent a year over
the next decade, though the aviation boom in India and China is
expected to exceed 7 percent.

[...]

Paradoxically, the worldwide pilot shortages are also making it
harder to properly train new pilots. Flight schools now complain
they are understaffed as instructors get hired by regional
carriers who have lost pilots to expanding airlines.

Robert M. Gary
July 20th 07, 02:05 AM
On Jul 19, 8:31 am, Larry Dighera > wrote:
> http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19806380/
> "Although all airline pilots are trained to the same standards ...
> there are certain intangibles that only come from experience,"
> said Patrick Smith, a U.S.-based airline pilot and aviation
> writer. "(Like) skill and a solid familiarity with airline
> operations."
>
> The pilot shortage is relatively recent. It is the result of
> extraordinary air traffic growth in the Persian Gulf, China and
> India; the rise of lucrative low-cost carriers in Europe and Asia;
> and the sustained recovery of the U.S. airlines from the industry
> recession caused by the 9/11 attacks.
>
> "There is a giant sucking sound, luring pilots to rapidly
> expanding airlines such as Emirates and Qatar and the budget
> carriers," said William Voss, head of the Flight Safety
> Foundation.
>
> "The result is that experienced pilots from developing countries
> in Asia and Africa are leaving in droves for places like the Gulf,
> and (those nations) are left with no choice but to recruit pilots
> fresh out of flight school."
>
> [...]
>
> In Europe, Belgium's largest carrier Brussels Airlines recently
> complained of losing an average of 10 captains a month to
> pilot-hungry airlines in the Gulf, and have requested government
> intervention.
>
> In the United States, where thousands of veterans were laid off
> after 9/11 and left the industry, regional carriers have been
> giving jobs to first officers with considerably less experience
> than would have been required 15 years ago.
>
> At some airlines, such as Northwest, pilot shortages have led to
> record-breaking flight cancellations in recent months. In the last
> full week of June, it canceled about 1,200 flights, or about 12
> percent of its flight schedule. After that, the airline said it
> would continue recalling all of its furloughed pilots and hire
> additional pilots.
>
> Figures released by International Air Transport Association show
> that global air travel will likely grow 4-5 percent a year over
> the next decade, though the aviation boom in India and China is
> expected to exceed 7 percent.
>
> [...]
>
> Paradoxically, the worldwide pilot shortages are also making it
> harder to properly train new pilots. Flight schools now complain
> they are understaffed as instructors get hired by regional
> carriers who have lost pilots to expanding airlines.

U.S. airlines are going to have a HUGE problem when they go into their
next upswing in business. Many seasoned pilots have left for more
money and better conditions helping foreign operators start up. These
foreign countries know that they need to bring in experienced pilots
to "seed" their operations before nationals can take over.

-robert

Larry Dighera
July 20th 07, 05:29 PM
On Thu, 19 Jul 2007 18:05:29 -0700, "Robert M. Gary"
> wrote in
. com>:

>U.S. airlines are going to have a HUGE problem when they go into their
>next upswing in business. Many seasoned pilots have left for more
>money and better conditions helping foreign operators start up.

Given the current state of the NAS, it's difficult to imagine a U.S.
airline upswing in business occurring anytime soon. :-(

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