NAMA commences test-run of ADS-C/ CPDLC in Nigerian airspace

The Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA) said on Monday it had begun the test-run of its high profile project – the Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Contract/Controller Pilot Data Link Communication (ADS-C/ CPDLC) in the nation’s airspace.

The facility aims to reduce the time it takes for air traffic control to issue instructions to a pilot and the pilot to acknowledge.

A successful log-on and communication with airlines such as British Airways, Lufthansa Airlines and Emirates Airlines was activated in the presence of aviation chief executives officers.

Other airlines that have also logged on to the service include Arik Air, Ethiopian Airlines and Etihad Airlines.

As a result, NAMA has issued an Aeronautical Information Circular (AIC) to aviation stakeholders worldwide, including airlines, service providers and the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) on the availability of ADS-C/ CPDLC in the Nigerian airspace.

The AIC is aimed at sensitising stakeholders on the commencement of the service in the country and also to highlight the benefits derivable from the use of the service, intended scope of the service as well as requirements for airborne equipment, flight planning and operations.

Meanwhile, a successful Site Acceptance Test (SAT) has been conducted, just as a four-day site training of critical personnel including engineers and air traffic controllers drawn from both Kano and Lagos ACCs has ended in Lagos, preparatory to the actual takeoff of the service.

Speaking on the successful test-run of ADS-C/ CPDLC, Ibrahim Abdulsalam, managing director of NAMA, dedicated the success of the project to the collective effort of staff of the agency “who have toiled endlessly to see to this wonderful addition to the digitalisation of air traffic management in Nigeria,” saying that “it therefore behoves our indigenous airlines to tap into the service in order to take advantage of the benefits and deliverables of enhanced safety and efficiency that come with ADS-C/ CPDLC.”

The current test-run is in line with international best practices, to allow operators adapt to the new service and make necessary comments and observations, prior to full implementation scheduled for November 12, 2015, Abdulsalam further said.

He also revealed that a similar test-run at the Kano ACC would commence in a couple of days time.

Also in his remarks, Sam Munda, sales director of SITA France (System providers), congratulated NAMA for implementing ADS-C/ CPDLC in Nigeria, which according to him, was a major plank in modern air traffic management, adding that “with this, NAMA has gone ahead to assert itself as a leading Air Navigation Service Provider on the continent of Africa.”

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