We covered the aviation safety agreement in the last Brexit bulletin, but following this week’s webinar with Tim Johnson, Policy Director at the CAA, we’ll keep the focus on aviation safety in this bulletin. Our overview of the UK-EU agreement on aviation safety can be found in the ADS members area.
This week’s webinar with Tim Johnson gave members the opportunity to ask questions and highlight any issues resulting from the new agreement directly with colleagues from the CAA. Common themes included:
- the recognition of CAA Form 1’s outside of the EU
- UK bilateral relations with other National Aviation Authorities (NAAs)
- the progress on the negotiations of the UK-EU Technical Implementing Procedures (TIP).
The key takeaway is that the CAA’s priority at the moment is the TIP negotiations (more on that below) and that UK companies experiencing issues with acceptance of CAA Form 1’s outside of the EU should first ascertain whether it is the local operator, or the NAA, that is refusing to accept the products accompanied by a CAA Form 1.
As set out above, the priority for the CAA, as well as industry, is now to agree the TIP to support the design authorisation aspects of the agreement. The CAA and EASA have met (virtually) several times since the start of the year and a draft TIP has been tabled. The CAA is positive about the progress made to date but do anticipate the process to take a few months given the outstanding issues and bureaucratic process that needs to take place on both sides.
Looking beyond the UK-EU agreement, the CAA and DfT are keen to understand the UK aerospace industry’s priorities for future policy and regulatory development. This includes identifying key non-EU markets with which to open discussions on bilateral agreements on aviation safety, if and how the UK should align with, and potentially diverge from, the EU in the years ahead, and how the UK CAA can work with the industry to facilitate innovation.
ADS will consult members on these issues in due course, but in the meantime please do not hesitate to get in touch with any initial thoughts you might have.