Concerns among pilots about a possible mid-air collision are spilling
over in Australia as a shortage of air traffic controllers leaves airport
towers unmanned, forcing passenger jets to fend for themselves.
There are currently no overnight air traffic
control services at Darwin, a northern gateway for carriers including Qantas Airways Ltd. and
Virgin Australia. Schedules show that at around midnight almost every day, more than a dozen flights have to arrive
or depart with almost no guidance from the ground.
On Australia’s northeast coast, the airport at Townsville - a popular
jumping off point for the Great Barrier Reef - doesn’t staff its control tower
at weekends. Almost 50 commercial services have to coordinate their own
landings or takeoffs on Sunday alone.
The labor crisis on the ground is adding risk in
the air during the post-Covid travel boom, with flight crews taking on the task of distancing
their planes from other air traffic - a responsibility that ordinarily lies
with air traffic controllers. Pilots say landing without direction from a tower
removes an important layer of security at a critical period of the flight. Concerned crews are blowing
the whistle after a surge in passenger traffic.
Airlines have scheduled 866 flights into Darwin this month, the most this year,
up from a Covid-era low of 171 in May 2020, according to Cirium data. Runway
construction work at the airport that restricts plane movements is making
landing and taking off without help even more complicated, pilots say.
In a
statement, the Civil Aviation Safety Authority said it’s “satisfied that the
arrangements between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. are safe for the anticipated traffic
mix” at Darwin. The regulator said it’s
working with the defence department, which is responsible for air traffic control
at Darwin, to “support a return to the previous service levels.” The
defence department didn’t respond to a request for comment.
A
spokesperson for Airservices Australia, the government agency that manages
airspace, said “rosters are tight in
some areas” but “safety is never compromised.” The organization has
recruited and trained 100 new air traffic controllers since 2020 and more than
70 others will join in the 2025 fiscal year, it said.
Safety
concerns among air traffic controllers themselves in Sydney - Australia’s main
aviation gateway - emerged early last year when staff submitted at least 15
confidential reports to the transport safety investigator. Some warned that an accident was almost inevitable unless the manpower
deficit was addressed. The Australian Airline Pilots’ Association was so concerned that
it issued a safety bulletin on the matter. The body warned there’s a higher
risk of a mid-air collision in areas of uncontrolled airspace because not all aircraft are equipped with
crash-avoidance systems. The alert was distributed to professional pilot bodies
worldwide. It’s not as if government bodies aren’t aware of long-standing
concerns among pilots and air traffic controllers.
The Australian Transport Safety Bureau in March
2023 published an anonymous confidential submission, apparently from an air
traffic controller, which highlighted a lack of understanding among controllers
and flight crews about what to do in uncontrolled airspace. The situation was “an accident waiting to happen,” the person said.