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Using A Flight-Risk Assessment Tool

It’s impossible to deny the importance of risk management in maintaining safe flight operations. Accident data consistently show the root cause of some 75 percent of general aviation’s fatal accidents is the pilot’s poor or non-existent risk-management skills. Whether they were never properly trained to consider the consequences of their decisions, didn’t understand those consequences or minimized their importance, we’ll never know. But we do know that a large proportion of them could have been prevented if the accident pilots had performed even minimal analysis of the risks presented by their proposed flight.

The aircraft came to rest on a steep snowy mountainside about 5 miles north of Aspen. Jane Pargiter/EcoFlight
Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • Poor risk management is a critical factor, identified as the root cause in about 75% of fatal general aviation accidents, emphasizing its importance in flight safety.
  • Pilots must master and continuously apply fundamental risk management principles: identifying potential hazards, assessing their likelihood and severity, and actively mitigating them before and during every flight.
  • While Flight Risk Assessment Tools (FRATs) can help streamline risk identification, they should not be used mechanically or relied upon for simple numerical "go/no-go" decisions; intelligent analysis and diligent mitigation of identified risks are essential.
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It’s impossible to deny the importance of risk management in maintaining safe flight operations. Accident data consistently show the root cause of some 75 percent of general aviation’s fatal accidents is the pilot’s poor or non-existent risk-management skills. Whether they were never properly trained to consider the consequences of their decisions, didn’t understand those consequences or minimized their importance, we’ll never know. But we do know that a large proportion of them could have been prevented if the accident pilots had performed even minimal analysis of the risks presented by their proposed flight.

Pilots need to understand risk management principles and be able to apply them before and during flights. A flight-risk assessment tool (FRAT) can streamline this process, but it shouldn’t be used mechanically. In addition, using a “scoring” or numerical risk rating to make a “go/no-go” decision is less effective and desirable than intelligently identifying, assessing and mitigating identified risks so that the mission can be completed.

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