National aviation authority
The national aviation authority (NAA) is the government statutory authority in each country that oversees the approval and regulation of civil aviation.
Contents |
Role
Due to the inherent dangers in the use of flight vehicles, NAA's typically regulate the following critical aspects of aircraft airworthiness and their operation:
- Design of aircraft, engines, airborne equipment and ground-based equipment affecting flight safety
- Conditions of manufacture and test of aircraft and equipment
- Maintenance of aircraft and equipment
- Operation of aircraft and equipment
- Licensing of pilots and maintenance engineers
- Licensing of airports and navigational aids
- Standards for air traffic control
Depending on the legal system of the parent country, the NAA will derive its power from an act of Parliament (such as the Civil or Federal Aviation Act), and is then empowered to make regulations within the bounds of the act. This allows technical aspects of airworthiness to be dealt with by subject matter experts and not politicians.12
The NAA may also be involved in the investigation of aircraft accidents, although in many cases this is left to a separate body (such as the Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) in Australia or the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) in the USA), to allow independent review of regulatory oversight.3
The NAA will regulate the control of air traffic but a separate agency will generally carry out air traffic control functions.
History
The independent development of NAAs has resulted in differing regulations in country to country. This has required aircraft manufacturers in the past to develop differing models for specific NAA requirements (such as the BAe Jetstream 31), and difficulty for airlines to travel into foreign jurisdictions. In an effort to resolve these issues, the Convention on International Civil Aviation (Chicago Convention) was signed in 1944. This then led to the establishment by the United Nations of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) in 1947 which now oversees member states and works to implement regulatory changes to ensure best practice regulations are adopted.4
Major national aviation authorities
- Agência Nacional de Aviação Civil (ANAC, Brazil)
- Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA, Australia)
- Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC, People's Republic of China)
- Civil Aviation Authority (Greece) (ΥΠΑ, Greece)
- Civil Aviation Department (CAD, Hong Kong)
- Civil Aviation Authority of Pakistan (CAA, Pakistan)
- Civil Aviation Authority (United Kingdom) (CAA, UK)
- Civil Aviation Authority of New Zealand (CAA, NZ)
- Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS, Singapore)
- Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA, India)
- Directorate General of Civil Aviation of Turkey (SHGM, Turkey)
- Direction Générale de l'Aviation Civile (DGAC, France)
- European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA, is not actually an NAA but plays part of the role within its member states of the EU)
- Federal Aviation Administration (FAA, USA)
- Iran Civil Aviation Organization (CAO, Islamic Republic of Iran)
- Italian Civil Aviation Authority (ENAC, Italy)
- Luftfahrt-Bundesamt (LBA, Germany)
- Transport Canada (TC, Canada)
See also
- Air route authority between the United States and the People's Republic of China
- List of civil aviation authorities
References
Content from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia
What Is This Site? The Ultimate Study Guide is a mirror of English Wikipedia. It exists in order to provide Wikipedia content to those who are unable to access the main Wikipedia site due to draconian government, employer, or school restrictions. The site displays all the text content from Wikipedia. Our sponsors generously cover part of the cost of hosting this site, and their ads are shown as part of this agreement. We regret that we are unable to display certain controversial images on some pages the site at the request of the sponsors. If you need to see images which we are unable to show, we encourage you to view Wikipedia directly if possible, and apologize for this inconvenience.
A product of XPR Content Systems. 47 Union St #9K, Grand Falls-Windsor NL A2A 2C9 CANADA
