Building on the successful and award-winning SESAR Augmented Approaches to Land (AAL) project, a consortium of key aviation stakeholders (airports, airspace users, airframe manufacturers, avionics manufacturers and regulatory bodies) has come together to launch AAL2. It aims to demonstrate augmented approach and landing operations and will run from 2018 to 2020.
Specifically, AAL2 will work on the following SESAR solutions:
AAL2 will provide important benefits, including improved accessibility in congested, low visibility conditions – complementing currently limited systems – to pave the way for the uptake of technologies required to overcome limitations of the current Instrument Landing System (ILS) equipment. This will contribute to Air Traffic management (ATM) modernisation by speeding up deployment.
THE AAL CONSORTIUM INCLUDES:
AAL2 builds on AAL, a project which developed and demonstrated several augmented approach procedures for small and medium-sized airports, using advanced procedures based on four different technologies: Ground and Satellite-based Augmentation System (GBAS/SBAS Advanced), Synthetic Vision Guidance System (SVGS), Enhanced Flight Vision System (EFVS). The aim of the project was to pave the way for the uptake of these technologies, which are needed to overcome the limitations of the current ILS – equipment which is costly to install and maintain, and which can only guide straightforward approaches by aircraft.
AAL saw 15 partners from across the aviation sector worked closely together to deliver one of the most ambitious large-scale demonstrations in Europe. It demonstrated, through some 360 trial flights, that satellite-based navigation and augmented vision can improve access and reduce the impact of Airspace Users on the environment.
As the technological pillar of Europe’s ambitious Single European Sky (SES) initiative, SESAR was established in 2017 and is the mechanism which coordinates and concentrates all EU R&D activities in ATM, pooling together a wealth of experts to develop the new generation of ATM. Today, SESAR unites around 3,000 experts in Europe and beyond.
In cooperation with its AAL2 consortium partners, EBAA is excited to create clear benefits, such as improved accessibility, alleviating airport and airspace traffic (particularly in congested, low-visibility conditions) and provide better connectivity throughout the European airspace.
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