London City Airport's
flights to be controlled from 70 miles away
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[May 19, 2017]
By Costas Pitas
LONDON
(Reuters) - If you fly into London City in two years' time, air traffic
controllers won't see your plane through a window but will guide it down
from screens 70 miles away as the airport becomes one of the first in a
major capital to use a digital control tower.
Staff will monitor planes with the help of high-tech 360-degree cameras
and sensors fitted to a newly constructed tower, with data and a
panoramic views all feeding through to the national air traffic control
center in the southern town of Swanwick.
The airport, which is undergoing a 350 million pound ($455 million)
expansion, is located near the Canary Wharf financial center in east
London and used by over 4.5 million passengers mainly for business
travel between Europe's major centers.
But from 2019, controllers will be based over 110 km away where the
airport says an array of digital tools will improve their awareness of
situations and efficiency, allowing for quick decision-making.
"A pioneering new digital air traffic control system will enhance safety
and improve resilience, setting a new standard for the global aviation
industry to follow," London City Airport Chief Executive Declan Collier
said.
"This cutting edge proven technology future-proofs London City Airport's
air traffic control for the next 30 years and beyond," he said.
The current control tower is reaching the end of its operational
lifespan, he said, with the new technology already in use at Sweden's
smaller Ornskoldsvik and Sundsvall airports.
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Aircraft stand idle at City Airport after a protest closed the
runway causing flights to be delayed, in London, Britain September
6, 2016. REUTERS/Eddie Keogh/File Photo
Controllers will be equipped with a range of tools including a close-up view of
aeroplane movements along the 1.5-km runway and cameras which can zoom in up to
30 times for close inspection.
Pictures from the airfield and data will be sent through independent and secure
fiber networks to the operations room in Swanwick, the airport said.
The technology is supplied by Saab Digital Air Traffic Solutions, a partnership
between LFV, the Swedish air navigation service provider, and military defense
and civil security firm Saab.
The airport, bought last year by a consortium including Canadian pension funds,
is due to expand as part of a development program which will see an extra two
million people flying to and from it every year by 2025 and an additional 30,000
annual flights.
Construction of the 50-metre digital tower will begin later this year and is due
to be completed in 2018, followed by a year of testing and training before it
becomes fully operational. (This version of the story was refiled to fix
headline)
(Editing by Keith Weir)
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