The latest global aviation news in English.

Chinese airlines lure US pilots tired of waiting to be captain
Kent John Krizman has spent 13 years as a co-pilot at American Airlines. For a chance to move across the cockpit, he’s ready to take a job in China.
“I should be flying as a captain,” said the 52-year-old San Francisco resident, who has 20,000 hours’ experience in jet planes. Promotion won’t happen for at least five more years at American, while in China it could occur straightaway, he said. He and his wife “are all set to go,” he said.
Krizman was one of about 550 pilots who attended a China job fair in Miami last week, as first officers find fewer chances for promotion in the US because of slower airline growth and captains retiring later. There are jobs available in China, where a surging economy and a fleet expected to grow 11 percent a year through 2015, according to government forecasts, is creating a need for experienced crewmembers.
“Everyone is facing a pilot shortage,” said Shen Wei, head of pilot recruitment at Shanghai-based budget carrier Spring Airlines. “Foreign pilots are the quickest option.”
To help lure overseas crew members, Spring Air pays foreign pilots 30 per cent more than domestic staff, Shen said, without elaboration.
Air China, the nation’s largest international carrier, was offering $US198,000 ($A184,000) a year net plus bonuses for Airbus A330 pilots, according to an advertisement on the website of Wasinc International, the recruitment company that helped run the job fair. During the two-day Miami event, which featured about a dozen Chinese airlines, about 70 pilots got provisional job offers, said Scott Snow, a spokesman.
Doubled pay
Roger Grant, an American Airlines co-pilot, said in Miami that he may be able to about double his salary by moving to China and becoming a captain. He also said a move may offer better long-term prospects.
“I’ve been worried about the direction that the pilot career has been taking,” said the 45-year-old, who lives in Boynton Beach, Florida, with his wife and 7-year-old daughter. Workers across the industry are “getting punished” for mistakes made by major airlines, he said.
It’s easier for first officers to become captains in China than the US because of demand rather than lower requirements, said Li Yanhua, an associate professor at Tianjin-based Civil Aviation University of China. Air-traffic controllers in China are already required to speak English, in line with global standards.
China demand
Nationwide, the number of pilots in China needs to rise to 40,000 from 24,000 in the five years ending 2015, according to a statement posted on the website of the Civil Aviation Administration of China. There are about 1700 foreign pilots working in the country, according to Spring Air’s Shen. Calls to the CAAC went unanswered.
China Southern Airlines, the nation’s biggest carrier, is looking to hire 725 pilots this year, including 100 from overseas, it said by e-mail. It employs 4400 pilots. Air China intends to recruit 600 pilots this year, including as many foreigners as possible, it said. The Beijing-based airline has 46 foreign pilots, or less than 2 percent of its roster.
In the US, first officers are finding it more difficult to get promotions as an increase in the mandatory retirement age for captains to 65 from 60 creates a logjam at the top of chain, said Kit Darby, who runs a pilot-hiring and compensation consulting firm in Peachtree City, Georgia.
Pilots who have been promoted at major US carriers are unlikely to leave as even junior captains earn $US12,700 per month on average, plus benefits such as pensions that can boost the package by 40 per cent, he said. Moving to China may appeal to the 4 per cent of the country’s 90,000 pilots that are on furloughs, he said.
“To the furloughed or unemployed pilot an overseas job looks pretty good,” he said.
Regional carriers
Pilots at US regional carriers, which fly smaller planes on short-haul routes, have also been caught by the retirement slowdown as they lose opportunities to move to better-paid positions flying larger models at a major airline.
Tony Giraldo, 51, for instance, said he has spent 15 years flying “numerous hours on the same equipment with no chance for an upgrade” at American Eagle, which ferries passengers from smaller cities to American Airlines’ airport hubs. He was considering a move to China as it offers “bigger aircraft and new possibilities,” he said.
Some American Airlines pilots recently were promoted to captain, 14 years after being hired, the carrier said. The wait for advancement was five years in the growth period of the 1980s and as long as two decades a few years ago, said Sam Mayer, spokesman for the Allied Pilots Association union.
AMR bankruptcy
The November bankruptcy filing by AMR Corporation, the Fort Worth, Texas-based parent of American Airlines and American Eagle, also spurred Giraldo to consider opportunities elsewhere, he said. Krizman, the American co-pilot, similarly said that concerns about Chapter 11 had “refocused my efforts” to look overseas.
American, which has a hub in Miami, wants to cut 400 pilot jobs as part of bankruptcy restructuring, as well as terminating pensions and outsourcing more flying to other carriers.
The carrier’s pilots “will remain highly compensated” even after the proposed changes, said Bruce Hicks, a company spokesman. American crew members “have long been among the best compensated in the industry,” he said.
China is stepping up pilot training to help meet demand. The Civil Aviation Flight University of China, the country’s biggest training provider, plans to accept 2,400 cadets this year, 33 per cent more than last year, it said in e-mailed reply to questions.
Using domestic pilots is simpler for Chinese airlines as there are some restrictions on foreigners flying domestic services, largely because the military controls much of the airspace, said Spring Air’s Shen.
“The boom in foreign pilots coming to China may only last a few years,” he said. “When we have more choice in the future, I will prefer our own pilots.”
Bloomberg

Southwest Airlines
The Southwest Airlines pilot reportedly spoke over the PA to pass on his best wishes to a ‘mom on board’, but a number of passengers mistook the phrase for ‘bomb on board’, the Daily Mail reports.
Airline staff reportedly rushed to reassure passengers as the pilot tried to explain that he was sending a greeting to the mother of an air traffic controller who was flying that day.
“He did clarify with the passengers that he was wishing the mother on board a happy birthday,” Southwest Airlines spokeswoman Brandi King told US TV station WCBS 880.
Several passengers have complained about the unnecessary scare.
The Federal Aviation Authority said it will review air controller communications, but will not investigate the pilot in question.
For more interesting articles to help you improve your Aviation English please visit http://aviationenglish.com and LIKE our Facebook Page.

Hong Kong Airlines
HONG KONG – Hong Kong Airlines is facing a controversy over animal cruelty, after shipping five live dolphins from Japan to Vietnam last month.
Information about the flight became public when an internal memo to airline staff was leaked to Chinese media last week.
The email said the flight, which included a two-hour refuelling stop in Hong Kong, netted HK$850,000 (S$137,500) in cargo revenue and that airline executives wanted to develop the business. It also included a photo of the dolphins being held in narrow makeshift structures inside the vessel.
Since it was leaked on Wednesday, more than 2,850 people have signed an online petition protesting against the shipment, China Daily reported. Hong Kong Airlines’ phone lines and website have also been jammed with angry calls and messages.
The five dolphins, flown from Osaka to Hanoi on Jan 16, were believed to have been sedated and kept in the cargo hold for at least seven hours.
They are suspected to have originated from Taiji, the area featured in the Oscar-winning documentary The Cove, where dolphins are slaughtered in their thousands every year.
Hong Kong Airlines declined to answer questions about where the dolphins originated from or their final destination. But a company spokeswoman told the Sunday Morning Post newspaper that they were fully “committed to the protection of animal welfare” and wanted an “open dialogue” with animal welfare groups.
The Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society and the Humane Society International have written to Hong Kong Airlines president Yang Jian Hong warning of a boycott unless the company promises to stop transporting dolphins.
For more interesting articles to help you improve your Aviation English please visit http://aviationenglish.com and LIKE our Facebook Page.

Nearly half UK pilots admit to falling asleep while flying, survey finds
ALMOST half the pilots in Britain have admitted to falling asleep while flying, according to a survey.
And if you thought that was alarming, the situation gets a whole lot worse: A third of those who confessed to dozing off have woken up to find their co-pilot also sleeping, UK’s Daily Mail reports.
The survey by the British Airline Pilot’s Association (BALPA) found that 43 per cent of those questioned have fallen asleep while flying at some point in their career.
The findings come after pilots voiced concerns over EU proposals to relax British flying rules, allowing pilots and crew to take on more frequent and longer shifts.
The European Aviation Safety Agency has proposed to standardise safety rules across Europe, despite BALPA’s claims that they fall short of British aviation practice.
Pilots say passengers’ lives will be at risk if regulations allowing them to land a plane after up to 22 hours without sleep are approved.
BALPA general secretary Jim McAuslan said the planned changes are “contrary to scientific advice” and would let pilots work seven consecutive early-start shifts. He said such conditions are “desperately fatiguing”.
Chair of the House of Commons transport committee Louise Ellman said the Government had noted the pilots’ protests and was looking at it from a public safety point of view.
Aviation English Asia has been offering part time and full time courses in Hong Kong since 2009.
All courses are available in Hong Kong. Check the schedule above for details.
Aviation English Asia has been offering part time courses in Vietnam since 2014.
All courses are available in Vietnam - typically every 8 weeks, or by special arrangement.
ICAO Aviation English, English for Aircraft Maintenance Engineers, Technicians and Mechanics, and English for Flight Attendants are available in Taipei, Tainan and Kaosiung.