NextGen research agreement moves forward

June 21, 2010
MADRID, Spain, 21 June 2010. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) in Washington and the European Commission concluded negotiations today on an agreement that will allow the U.S. and Europe to work together on Next Generation (NextGen) Air Transportation System research aimed at providing seamless air traffic services for aircraft flying between the two continents.
Posted by John McHaleMADRID, Spain, 21 June 2010. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) in Washington and the European Commission concluded negotiations today on an agreement that will allow the U.S. and Europe to work together on Next Generation (NextGen) Air Transportation System research aimed at providing seamless air traffic services for aircraft flying between the two continents."Harmonization is the key to the future of air travel over the North Atlantic," says FAA chief operating officer Hank Krakowski, who signed a Memorandum of Consultations with Daniel Calleja, European Commission director for air transport in Madrid. "This agreement allows us to work together to give the airlines a seamless transition between our airspaces."The goal of the agreement is to provide aircraft flying over the North Atlantic with consistent service in terms of avionics, communication protocols, and procedures, and operational methods under NextGen and its European counterpart, the Single European Sky ATM Research (SESAR).The agreement calls for 22 specific areas of cooperation. These areas include research on Data Comm, which will improve safety and efficiency by replacing voice communications with data communications, and System Wide Information Management (SWIM), an information platform that will allow FAA systems to speak to one another. Research will also be conducted on systems used by other parts of the aviation community, including the European Commission, the airlines, the military and the Department of Homeland Security. Collaborative research will also be done on emerging technologies such as 4-D Trajectory-Based Operations, which introduce the fourth dimension of time to the existing dimensions of latitude, longitude, and altitude in an aircraft's flight profile, meaning pilots and air traffic controllers will know when an aircraft will be at specific points along its flight path.Today's agreement, which was finalized in Madrid because Spain holds the current presidency of the European Union, replaces a Memorandum of Understanding reached between the FAA and the European Commission in 2007. That agreement allowed both sides to collaborate on basic strategies in the move toward NextGen and SESAR. This agreement calls for specific, joint research and development on NextGen/SESAR projects.

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