U.S. airlines warn 5G wireless could wreak havoc with flights
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[December 16, 2021] By
David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Major U.S. air
carriers warned on Wednesday that plans by wireless carriers to use
spectrum for 5G wireless services starting Jan. 5 could disrupt
thousands of daily flights and cost air passengers $1.6 billion annually
in delays.
AT&T and Verizon Communications must delay the plans to use C-Band
spectrum for 5G wireless services, United Airlines Chief Executive Scott
Kirby said following a U.S. Senate Commerce Committee hearing, saying it
could delay, divert or cancel about 4% of daily flights and impact
hundreds of thousands of passengers.
"It would be a catastrophic failure of government," Kirby told
reporters.
The aviation industry and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) have
raised concerns about potential interference of 5G with sensitive
aircraft electronics like radio altimeters
Last week, the FAA issued new airworthiness directives warning that
interference from 5G wireless spectrum could result in flight
diversions, but did not quantify the impact.
"Coming Jan. 5 -- unless something changes -- we will not be able to use
radio altimeters at 40-something of the largest airports in the
country," Kirby said. "It is a certainty. This is not a debate."
Kirby said it would mean that at major U.S. airports in the event of bad
weather, cloud cover or even heavy smog "you could only do visual
approaches essentially."
Trade group Airlines for America (A4A) said Wednesday that if the FAA 5G
directive had been in effect in 2019, "approximately 345,000 passenger
flights, 32 million passengers, and 5,400 cargo flights would have been
impacted in the form of delayed flights, diversions, or cancellations."
Southwest Airlines' chief executive, Gary Kelly, told the Senate hearing
that if the FAA directive takes effect it "would be a significant
setback" to its operations.
The wireless industry defended the technology.
"The aviation industry’s fearmongering relies on completely discredited
information and deliberate distortions of fact," CTIA, a wireless trade
group, said.
It said that 5G operates safely and without causing harmful interference
to aviation operations in nearly 40 countries around the world.
The Biden administration is eager to see the issue resolved. White House
National Economic Council director Brian Deese met with Federal
Communications Commission Chair Jessica Rosenworcel and Transportation
Secretary Pete Buttigieg on the issue Wednesday, sources told Reuters.
The White House and the Transportation Department did not comment.
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United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby and Delta Air Lines Executive Vice
President John Laughter testify before the Senate Commerce, Science,
and Transportation Committee in the Russell Senate Office Building
on Capitol Hill, in Washington, U.S., December 15, 2021 Chip
Somodevilla/Pool via REUTERS
Republican Senator Marsha Blackburn at the hearing urged airlines to work with
the wireless carriers to reach agreement.
Rosenworcel, who did not comment Wednesday, has said she believes the issues can
be resolved and spectrum safely used.
In addition to agreeing to delay the commercial launch of C-band wireless
service until Jan. 5, AT&T and Verizon in November adopted precautionary
measures for six months to limit interference.
Aviation industry groups said they were insufficient to address air safety
concerns and have made a counterproposal.
United's Kirby said the FCC and FAA "need to get in a room and talk to each
other and solve the problem," adding that the issue "cannot be solved on the
back of airlines."
A4A said the FAA directive would "materially disrupt airline operations" and
said cargo operators estimate it "would have cost them $400 million annually."
The group said "the annual impact cost to passengers to be approximately $1.59
billion" of travel delays.
Wireless carriers have shown no interest in further delays to using the
spectrum, which the industry paid more than $80 billion to acquire.
The FAA directives order revising airplane and helicopter flight manuals to
prohibit some operations requiring radio altimeter data when in the presence of
5G C-Band wireless broadband signals.
The FAA plans to issue further notices to airlines before Jan. 5 offering more
detail on the potential interference and is in discussion about which altimeters
could be used under the current mitigation plans.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by David Gregorio and Leslie Adler)
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