GLOBAL AVIATION SAFETY ROADMAP

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The roadmap serves as an action plan to assist the aviation community in developing RASPs and NASPs, in line with the GASP goals, through a structured, common frame of reference for all relevant stakeholders. The global aviation safety roadmap outlines specific safety enhancement initiatives (SEIs) associated with each of the GASP targets. 


Each SEI includes a set of actions that stakeholders may use to develop and implement specific action plans. States and regions, in collaboration with industry, should use the roadmap to support or complement, as applicable, national and regional safety management activities and develop specific SEIs to support the strategy presented in their NASPs and RASPs respectively. 


The use of the global aviation safety roadmap as the basis for RASPs and NASPs enhances coordination, thus reducing inconsistencies and duplication of effort.

ORG & OPS Roadmaps

 

The global aviation safety roadmap is composed of two pieces:

 

1) Organizational challenges — this part of the roadmap referred to as the ORG roadmap, presented in Appendix A provides SEIs to meet GASP goals (and associated targets) related to States' safety oversight capabilities and the implementation of SSPs, as well as industry's implementation of SMS, and contains two distinct components, in line with the GASP goals, to address safety management responsibilities:

                                1)            State safety oversight system; and

                                2)            SSP, including service providers' SMS.

 

2) Operational safety risks — this part of the roadmap referred to as the OPS roadmap, presented in Appendix B provides SEIs to meet the GASP goal (and associated target) related to a continuous reduction of operational safety risks, and actions to address the G-HRCs presented in the GASP.

 

The ORG and OPS Roadmaps may be found in Appendix A and B of the Global Aviation Safety Roadmap (Doc 10161), respectively. 


History of the Roadmap


In May 2005, a meeting with industry identified the need to broaden the Global Aviation Safety Plan (GASP) to provide a common frame of reference for all stakeholders. Such a plan would allow a more proactive approach to aviation safety and help coordinate and guide safety policies and initiatives worldwide to reduce the accident risk for commercial aviation. It was then decided that industry representatives from the Industry Safety Strategy Group (ISSG) would work together with ICAO to develop a common approach for aviation safety. The global aviation safety roadmap, developed by the ISSG, provided the foundation upon which the GASP 2007 edition was based. In March 2006, ICAO held the Directors General of Civil Aviation Conference (DGCA/06) on a global strategy for aviation safety, which welcomed the development of the global aviation safety roadmap and recommended that ICAO develop an integrated approach to SEIs, based on the roadmap. The global aviation safety roadmap would provide a global framework for the coordination of safety policies and initiatives.


In 2013, during its 38th Session, the Assembly urged ICAO to complete the development of a global aviation safety roadmap in support of the GASP. The second High-level Safety Conference held in 2015 (HLSC 2015) agreed on the need for ICAO to develop a global aviation safety roadmap in support of the GASP, in collaboration with States, regional aviation safety groups (RASGs), aviation safety partners and industry.


In 2015, ICAO established the Global Aviation Safety Plan Roadmap Group (GASPRG) to undertake necessary actions to assist ICAO in updating the GASP, particularly in relation to the development of a new global aviation safety roadmap that would support the implementation of the GASP. The GASPRG was composed of subject matter experts from States, regions and industry. It included participation by all the organizations previously involved in the ISSG. The 2017-2019 edition of the GASP included the introduction of the new global aviation safety roadmap, developed by the GASPRG, to assist the aviation community in achieving the objectives presented in the GASP. It provided a structured, common frame of reference for all relevant stakeholders from States, regions and industry.


The 2020-2022 edition of the GASP included a new set of goals, targets and indicators, in line with the United Nations' 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. The global aviation safety roadmap was maintained and expanded to encompass organizational challenges and operational safety risks. The 2020-2022 edition of the GASP was developed through the efforts of the GASP Study Group (GASP-SG), a joint industry-regulatory expert group established by ICAO, as the successor to the GASPRG, to ensure that the plan and its content reflect the needs of the aviation community at the international, regional and national levels.


Based on feedback received, for the 2023-2025 edition of the GASP, the global aviation safety roadmap was migrated to a standalone manual, with an ICAO document number and edition number. This change was made to provide two different documents: the Global Aviation Safety Plan (GASP, Doc 10004), as a high-level document containing the global safety strategy, and the Global Aviation Safety Roadmap (Doc 10161), as detailed guidance for the development of an action plan, with specific safety enhancement initiatives (SEIs), for inclusion in regional and national aviation safety plans (RASPs and NASPs).


The global aviation safety roadmap is updated through the work of the GASP-SG, to amend its content in line with the most current edition of the GASP. The global aviation safety roadmap includes updated SEIs that provide actions in support of each of the GASP targets, based on the global organizational challenges and the global operational safety risks identified in the plan.




Download a copy of the Global Aviation Safety Roadmap (Doc 10161):

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