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Canada Transport regulator revises pilot fatigue rules in response to industry complaints

Canada's Transport regulator is re-examining its regulations in order to reduce pilot fatigue, due to concerns from the industry that they are too complicated. This is just one of many countries who struggle with rules designed to improve safety.

India's aviation regulator has granted IndiGo, its largest airline, a "one-time" exemption from the new rules on pilot night duty, as well as other regulations. This was after IndiGo's poor planning resulted in 2,000 cancellations of flights this month.

Transport Canada said on Tuesday that it had been "diligently" reviewing the regulations governing pilots' duty hours and flight times in consultation with air operators and pilots.

The regulator stated that since the current rules came into effect in 2018, the industry has expressed concerns about the "complexity" and "inoperability" of the current framework.

A global pilot union leader said that India's decision this week to exempt itself from rest regulations was concerning. In Canada, an aviators' union said, "Transport Canada has proposed exemptions to Canada's duty time regulations."

The Air Line Pilots Association said that Transport Canada had proposed to allow pilots to work for up to 23 consecutive days, rather than receiving a day off every week. Transport Canada has not commented on the proposed exemptions.

Canada and other countries have implemented regulations to improve safety by limiting the number of hours commercial pilots are allowed to fly.

Transport Canada announced in 2018 that it would reduce the number of flight 'hours to 1,000 over 365 days from 1,200 and establish a maximum working day between?nine and 13 hours depending on the start time. The previous limit for a commercial airline pilot was 13?hours 45 minutes.

According to the new Indian rules, the maximum time that pilots are allowed to fly on flights that extend into the night between midnight and the early morning is limited at 10 hours.

In 2011, the United States released new regulations to combat pilot fatigue. An industry group claimed that the regulations would cost the country $2 billion per year and, over time, cut 27,000 direct jobs in the aviation industry. (Reporting and editing by Jamie Freed in Montreal. Allison Lampert is reporting from Montreal.

(source: Reuters)