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What Can We Do to Make Sure the FAA and Southwest Airlines Fiascoes Never Happen Again?

2023-03-06
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Perhaps unknowingly, airline passengers who lived through the outage of the Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA’s) Notice to Air Systems (NOTAM) system in January or Southwest Airlines’ meltdown in December were part of history.

The NOTAM outage was the first time the FAA paused all domestic departures in the U.S. since 9/11. This ground stop of just a few hours caused enormous delays in the air transportation system, resulting in three out of five flights being delayed or cancelled, and average delays reaching almost 90 minutes, according to FlightAware.

Weeks earlier, the unprecedented volume of flight cancellations that occurred over more than a week as a result of Southwest’s meltdown forced the airline to abandon its automated decision support tools and revert to employees manually putting its complex network of flights, aircraft and crew schedules back together.  From December 22 to 29, Southwest canceled just over half its scheduled flights, causing more than 15,700 cancellations, an immediate loss of $620 million in the fourth quarter of the 2022 fiscal year—and an additional projected loss of $300–350 million in the first quarter because of “a carryover revenue drag from the operational disruption” according to Southwest executives.

Both failures stem from the same fundamental challenges facing a sprawling, and increasingly antiquated, U.S. air travel network. As deeper investigations probe these events, we need to find solutions that update the antiquated IT systems and business practices they exposed, and we must change the way we fund the FAA, whose regulatory activities undergird the entire U.S. air travel system.

NOTAM failed when FAA contractors deleted files from the vital flight planning system, which relies on “failing vintage hardware,” according to the agency. This comes after multiple industry stakeholders have called for increased federal funding for the FAA, and Airlines for America and other organizations have noted the need for dependable funding untethered from the election cycle. Thankfully we can use successful projects from NextGen, the Next Generation Air System, a program within the FAA that is modernizing the U.S. National Airspace System (NAS), as a model for reform.

Southwest’s meltdown came when slow-moving blizzards with minus 40 degree Fahrenheit windchills rolled through Denver and Chicago, two of its biggest depots. This overwhelmed its outdated flight management systems, which operate within a primarily point-to-point airport network, which is more vulnerable to disruption than the hub-and-spoke model used by other airlines. For context, by December 24, the third day of the weather event, Southwest, which was also managing an abnormally high number of employees calling in sick, was cutting 55 flights per hour compared to just four per hour on American Airlines’ mainline service.

While investigations by Southwest and the U.S. Department of Transportation are underway to help identify root causes, what is clear is that, like with NOTAM’s failure, Southwest’s system needed an upgrade and was unable to adapt when put under stress. The airline plans to spend $1 billion this year on IT upgrades and the replacement of its flight scheduling system, but it must also be willing to reform its business models. For example, Southwest could more aggressively cancel flights before major weather events and fix labor agreements, allowing pilots to electronically confirm assignments when the snow falls. Luckily, there are also examples from other airlines of how to make air travel more robust.

Robust networks help isolate delays, helping airlines more quickly return to normal operations. I interviewed Timothy L. Jacobs, former director of crew systems and technologies at American Airlines, who, with his colleagues, designed robust networks at that airline using “hub isolation” and “crew with aircraft” concepts to assign the same aircraft and crew to out-and-back round  trips that use the same hub, e.g., Dallas to Boston and Boston to Dallas. If the Dallas-to-Boston leg is canceled, it is easier to keep delays from spreading to other hubs, because you can keep both your crew and aircraft in Dallas, where you want them to be for the next pair of flights. In contrast, Southwest’s point-to-point network makes it more difficult to contain flight disruptions.

Southwest’s meltdown highlights the complexity and interconnectedness of our air transportation system. That partly explains why air traffic control (ATC) system modernization is so challenging and why funding reform is so necessary. This is where NextGen comes in. With NextGen, the FAA is modernizing the NAS with new capabilities like “precision satellite navigation, data link communications for air traffic controllers and pilots and an integrated weather system.”

NextGen arose from a 2003 congressional mandate that FAA collaborate with multiple organizations and federal agencies to develop a plan for modernizing NAS by 2025. And while important milestones have been met by FAA and its industry partners over the last 20 years, a 2021 report by the Office of the Inspector General found that “FAA has struggled to integrate key NextGen technologies and capabilities due to extended program delays that caused ripple effect delays with other programs.” This results both from shortfalls in funding for NextGen, which multiple stakeholders including the CEOs of American, Delta, and United have decried, and from a lack of reliable funding streams for the FAA. However, there is disagreement on whether the FAA should continue to lead these efforts. In 2014, the FAA’s Management Advisory Council recommended that a separate organization, potentially modeled after NAV CANADA be formed. NAV CANADA was founded in 1996 and is a private organization responsible for operating and managing Canada’s civilian air space. Advocates for ATC privatization in the U.S. point to the greater flexibility in not only spending but also collecting fees from airlines, drone operators and other potential new users of the airspace, which would provide a more equitable and stable source of funding removed from politics.

Even without creating a new regulatory body, we can look at NextGen’s successes to help plan future modernization. I spoke with Tim Niznik, director of analytics for the Integrated Operations Center at American Airlines, who was involved with a NextGen project in Charlotte, N.C., and Dallas that recommended when aircraft should pull back from gates in order to avoid long departure queues and more efficiently merge into the “highways” in the sky. Going into the project, researchers hypothesized that a metering approach, like the traffic signals used on highway ramps to control vehicle merging, would work, but found that virtual queues that accounted for en route information worked better. Niznik likens this to “Waze for the skies”  wherein knowledge of congestion in the sky can help airlines better plan their routes and takeoff times, and what time they should pull back from the gate.

While this may seem simple, Niznik notes this “was a major overhaul of the airport operational system that tied together different [systems] within the FAA to link the surface operations and en route operations.” Niznik attributes this project’s success to multiple factors, including strong stakeholder participation, an agile software development process and the fact that NASA, which co-led this project with the FAA, had a dependable source of funding that accommodated unanticipated challenges.

In the wake of these two historic failures of our air travel system, I believe it’s time we recognize major technological and funding reforms are needed, from the airline level to the FAA itself. Both Southwest Airlines’ and the FAA’s meltdowns have shown us the dangers of leaving outdated infrastructure and practices in place. As we approach FAA reauthorization this year, I hope the aviation industry and its regulators make history again—this time in a positive way—through building upon lessons learned from successful projects, with Congress providing adequate and stable funding, and with research and new technology getting the priority they deserve.  

This is an opinion and analysis article, and the views expressed by the author or authors are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

参考译文
我们能做些什么来确保美国联邦航空局和西南航空公司的惨败不再发生?
也许在不知不觉中,经历过美国联邦航空管理局(FAA) 1月份航空系统通知(NOTAM)系统中断或西南航空公司(Southwest Airlines) 12月份崩溃的航空公司乘客已经成为历史的一部分。NOTAM停飞是911事件以来美国联邦航空局首次暂停所有国内航班。FlightAware的数据显示,短短几个小时的地面停留造成了航空运输系统的严重延误,导致五分之三的航班延误或取消,平均延误时间接近90分钟。几周前,由于西南航空的崩溃,在一周多的时间里出现了前所未有的航班取消量,迫使该航空公司放弃了自动化决策支持工具,转而由员工手动将其复杂的航班网络、飞机和机组人员的时间表重新组合在一起。从12月22日至29日,西南航空取消了超过一半的定期航班,造成超过15700次取消,在2022财年第四季度立即损失6.2亿美元,据西南航空高管称,由于“运营中断拖累了收入”,第一季度预计损失将增加3亿至3.5亿美元。这两项失败都源于美国庞大且日益陈旧的航空旅行网络所面临的同样根本性挑战。随着对这些事件的深入调查,我们需要找到解决方案,更新它们暴露出的过时的IT系统和商业实践,我们必须改变我们为联邦航空局提供资金的方式,其监管活动支撑着整个美国航空旅行系统。根据该机构的说法,当美国联邦航空局承包商从重要的飞行计划系统中删除文件时,NOTAM失败了,该系统依赖于“失效的老式硬件”。此前,多个行业利益相关者呼吁增加联邦对FAA的资金投入,美国航空公司和其他组织也指出,需要不受选举周期限制的可靠资金。值得庆幸的是,我们可以借鉴下一代航空系统(NextGen)的成功项目,该项目是美国联邦航空局(FAA)的一个项目,正在对美国国家空域系统(NAS)进行现代化改造,作为改革的典范。西南航空公司的崩溃是在零下40华氏度的缓慢移动的暴风雪席卷丹佛和芝加哥时发生的,这是该公司最大的两个仓库。这使其过时的航班管理系统不堪负荷。该系统主要在点对点机场网络中运行,与其他航空公司使用的中心辐射型模式相比,这种网络更容易受到干扰。相比之下,到12月24日,也就是恶劣天气事件的第三天,西南航空公司(Southwest)每小时减少了55个航班,而美国航空(American Airlines)的主线服务每小时仅减少4个航班。该公司还在处理异常多的员工请病假。虽然西南航空公司和美国交通部正在进行调查,以帮助找出根本原因,但很明显,就像NOTAM的故障一样,西南航空公司的系统需要升级,并且在承受压力时无法适应。该航空公司计划今年投入10亿美元用于IT升级和更换航班调度系统,但它也必须愿意改革其商业模式。例如,西南航空可以在重大天气事件发生前更积极地取消航班,并修改劳动协议,允许飞行员在下雪时以电子方式确认任务。幸运的是,其他航空公司也有如何让航空旅行更加稳健的例子。
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