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Travel

2017: the safest year on record for air passengers

Sertan Sanderson with Reuters, Aviation Safety Network, to70
January 2, 2018

Last year marked the safest year on record for commercial air travel according to aviation experts. There were no commercial passenger jet fatalities in 2017.

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London Heathrow  Sicherheit Polizei
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/T. Ockenden

Airlines recorded zero accident deaths in commercial passenger jets last year, according to two independent reports released at the beginning of 2018. The Dutch aviation consulting firm To70 and the Aviation Safety Network (ASN) both confirmed that there had been no commercial passenger jet fatalities in 2017.

"2017 was the safest year for aviation ever," Adrian Young of To70 told the Reuters news agency.

ASN President Harro Ranter explained that since 1997, "the average number of airliner accidents has shown a steady and persistent decline, for a great deal thanks to the continuing safety-driven efforts by international aviation organizations such as ICAO, IATA, Flight Safety Foundation and the aviation industry."

Aviation deaths around the world have been steadily falling in the past two decades. ASN said that as recently as 2005, there were more than 1,000 deaths aboard commercial passenger flights annually worldwide. To70 estimates that the fatal accident rate for large commercial passenger flights is now at 0.06 per million flights - or one fatal accident for every 16 million flights.

Read more: What you need to know about air safety and crashes

Other risks remain

The two organizations did, however, disagree on the tally of fatal accidents in 2017, with To70 reporting two fatal accidents to passenger airliners, both involving small turboprop planes, while ASN counted "10 fatal airliner accidents, resulting in 44 occupant fatalities and 35 persons on the ground."

ASN added, however, that commercial cargo flight accidents involving civilians were also included in the count while military transport flight incidents were not — highlighting that even taking those into consideration would still leave 2017 as the year with the lowest numbers of fatalities in modern aviation history.

To70 meanwhile stressed, however, that non-fatal accidents also remained a threat, with engine failures and other engine-related accidents remaining an issue that the aviation industry has to improve. It also stressed that other safety risks had arisen in years, such as the rise of fires caused by lithium-ion batteries in electronics such as mobile phone carried on board.

The year also saw a near-miss in what has been dubbed the "greatest aviation disaster" ever narrowly avoided when an Air Canada plane nearly landed on four other jets on the runway at San Francisco airport. 

 

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