BlueSky Business Aviation News | ||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
“I believe that we are at an historical time in the aviation industry,” Huerta said. “We’re making a lot of decisions that will shape the next 50 years.” ADS-B: The deadline’s set Huerta said ADS-B - automatic dependent surveillance broadcast, the next-generation system that will replace radar-based air traffic control - represents a major step forward. The question he’s asked most often is whether the government will delay its Jan. 1, 2020, deadline for including ADS-B equipment on most U.S.-based aircraft. “The answer is no - it won’t be extended. The deadline is real.” Operators in Europe currently face a mid-2020 deadline. Airline arrival, departure management Huerta said another new system is beginning to deliver much more efficient management of commercial aircraft arrivals and departures. The new technology, still being rolled out around the country, replaces outdated terminal radar approach control equipment and will enable more direct routing of airline flights, thus resulting in fuel savings. The first systems already are saving the equivalent of 3 million gallons of jet fuel a year in Houston and nearly 4 million gallons in Dallas. Certification: From black-and-white to gray
Huerta comes across as straightforward and personable, an impression confirmed by Jack Pelton, former Cessna CEO and current board chairman for the Experimental Aircraft Association, in his introduction. After running through Huerta’s long, detailed and impressive resume, Pelton said the two have been close friends for years. Then he delivered his true endorsement. “(Huerta) is an authentic leader and a wonderfully genuine person.”
|