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Skyguide

Skyguide (Swiss Air Navigation Services Ltd.) is an air navigation service provider which manages and monitors Swiss airspace. The company, which was formerly known as Swisscontrol, changed its name to skyguide (officially written lowercase) in 2001. Skyguide is a joint-stock company under Swiss private law which is responsible, on behalf of the Swiss Confederation, for ensuring the safety of all Swiss airspace and of adjoining airspace areas in Germany, Austria, France and Italy that have been delegated to its control. For Swiss airspace, this duty extends to both civil and military air navigation services.

Skyguide Logo

Skyguide is subject to the supervisory authority of the Swiss Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications (DETEC). Its principal shareholder is the Swiss Confederation, which holds 99.91% of its share capital. The company employs some 1,500 people, around two-thirds of them in the provision of air navigation services, a quarter in technical services and the rest mainly in administration. Alex Bristol, the current CEO, assumed his duties on 1 July 2017.[1] Skyguide is headquartered in Meyrin, near Geneva Airport.[2]

Skyguide in figures edit

Skyguide managed some 1,198,663 instrument flight rules (IFR) flights through its airspace in 2016 – an average of around 3,285 flights a day – and generated total annual operating revenue of over CHF 455 million. Switzerland's air navigation service provider currently employs some 1,500 personnel spread over 14 locations throughout the country. Two-thirds of them are in air navigation services, around a quarter are in technical functions, and most of the rest hold administrative positions.[3]

Military tasks edit

Skyguide's most important partners are the Swiss Air Force. Switzerland's air policing and defence are the responsibility of the Swiss Air Force, which, with its primary radars, can also detect flying objects not emitting a transponder signal. Skyguide is unusual, however, in that in addition to its civil air traffic management role, the company also provides Switzerland's military air navigation services.[4]

Skyguide's military controllers have all completed their basic civil air traffic controller training. In addition, these controllers will also have had additional training for military airport operations or in tactical fighter control. Normally, they work as civilian employees alongside military personnel; but if required (e.g. for the annual World Economic Forum in Davos), they will perform duties within the military operation.

Skyguide manages Swiss airspace dynamically together with the Swiss Air Force according to current military or civil needs. In some cases, skyguide's military controllers may also guide fighters in the so-called "cross-border areas" in France or Italy. So military airspace may also extend beyond national borders and be used by the air forces of the two countries concerned.

Innovation edit

Stripless: Since 2015, skyguide has adopted a harmonized stripless system at both its control centres (en-route & lower airspace sectors). The benefits here include increased heads-up time, shorter and safe handovers as well as providing voice traffic with additional digital support.

Virtual Centre: In consolidating its air traffic control centres virtually (instead of physically, with all the latter's political, social and economic ramifications), skyguide is generating a new paradigm in air navigation services. The Virtual Centre model promises substantial benefits in terms of operational flexibility, business continuity and cost-effective technical evolution.[5]

Satellite-based navigation: The potential for further developing conventional navigation systems based on expensive terrestrial equipment is reaching its limits. So if flight procedures are to be further refined, new technologies are required. One such technology is satellite-based navigation, which offers more possibilities than conventional navigation systems and provides a promising foundation for innovative new approaches and departure procedures. One of the key advantages of this new technology is the greater positional accuracy it provides. This, in turn, offers several further benefits, with the promise of more efficient air traffic handling, lower fuel consumption, fewer pollutant emissions and less noise, too.[6]

Solar Impulse: Skyguide actively supported the pioneering Solar Impulse venture in its round-the-world flight, providing air traffic services during test flights, aeronautical publications and a 24/7 helpdesk throughout both the voyage and the years leading up to it. Skyguide shares Solar Impulse's passion for a more sustainable aviation industry and is proud to have served as a facilitator here.[7]

Locations edit

 
Skyguide HQ Geneva
 
Skyguide Air Traffic Control Center &Air Force HQ at Wangen

Skyguide's main operating locations are its two operations centres, one next to Dübendorf Air Force Base in Wangen-Brüttisellen (near Zurich) and the other near Geneva Airport at Meyrin. The latter is also home to the company's administrative head office. The Wangen centre came into operation in February 2009. The centre is responsible for the airspace above German-speaking Switzerland, Lichtenstein, Western Austria and parts of Southern Germany. It is also home to the company's Aeronautical Information Services and to the Skyguide Training Center, which has two tower simulators and further facilities for the real-time training of air traffic controllers and other air navigation services personnel for both skyguide and foreign air navigation service providers. The premises also accommodate the peacetime operations centre and air surveillance center of the Swiss Air Force.

Skyguide's Geneva centre is responsible for Western Swiss airspace, the airspace above the French Alps and part of Italian airspace on the border with France.

Skyguide maintains further operations at Bern (Belp), Buochs, Grenchen, Lugano (Agno) and St. Gallen-Altenrhein regional airports and at numerous all-military or joint civil/military airfields. These include Alpnach, Dübendorf, Emmen, Locarno, Meiringen, Payerne and Sion. At Les Eplatures regional airport, the air traffic services have been delegated to the airport operator.

Radar stations edit

 
Radar on Lägern near Boppelsen

Skyguide uses nine radar stations for civil air traffic control:[8]

  • Two own wide-ranging secondary radar stations also referred to as «en route»- radar stations, with locations above the Zurich community Boppelsen on the Jura hillside Lägern and on the La Dôle
  • Wide-ranging secondary radar dates from the Swiss Air Force FLORAKO radar ("TG") in Ticino on Mt. Scopi
  • Two own combined primary and secondary radar, also referred to as «Approach» radar stations, at the airports of Geneva (in Cointrin) and Zurich (on the Klotener Holberg) for landing and take-off guidance.
  • Four foreign radar stations to complete the national radar coverage in Switzerland and to provide air traffic to neighboring air traffic controllers with locations in Cirfontaine and Nevers (France), Gosheim (Germany) and Monte Lesima (Italy).

Collaborations in Europe edit

Skyguide's partners are the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), Eurocontrol (Europe's umbrella air navigation services organization) and the Civil Air Navigation Services Organisation (CANSO).

Europe's airspace is highly fragmented today. The Single European Sky (SES) project of the European Commission is intended to harmonize the continent's air traffic management systems and, in doing so, enhance the efficiency of the overall airspace structure. And one prerequisite for this – in addition to tailoring airways more closely to users' requirements rather than basing them on national borders – is the creation of a series of large integrated airspace blocks.

Skyguide is a member of Functional Airspace Block Europe Central (FABEC),[9] which controls some 55% of all the air traffic handled in Europe, or around 5.3 million flights a year. The six FABEC member states – Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Switzerland – signed the corresponding international agreement in December 2010, laying the legal foundation for the new airspace entity.

Skyguide's main contribution to the defragmentation of European airspace, however, is its concept to consolidate existing air navigation centres into a virtual entity (the "Virtual Centre").

History edit

Skyguide traces its origins back to 1922, when, after the First World War had demonstrated the importance of telecommunications, Switzerland concluded an agreement with the Marconi company. Swiss subsidiary Marconi Radio AG was founded on 23 February of that year to develop wireless telegraphy. On 10 May 1928, the company name was changed to Radio Schweiz AG (RSAG) to emphasize its Swiss national character. And on 1 January 1931, the Swiss Confederation mandated Radio Schweiz to provide air navigation services in Switzerland.[10][11]

Up until the end of the Second World War, Radio Schweiz was primarily engaged in meeting the telegraphic communications needs of the Swiss Confederation. Only on 21 December 1948, after concluding an agreement under which the Confederation and the country's airports would bear the costs of air navigation services, did Radio Schweiz start to monitor Swiss airspace.[11]

On 1 January 1989, Radio Schweiz's air navigation activities were restructured and brought into the new Swisscontrol company, whose headquarters were in Bern. Swisscontrol was converted into a public limited company in 1996, and its headquarters were transferred from Bern to Geneva.

At the beginning of 2001, military air navigation services, which had been provided separately until then, were also placed under the responsibility of Swisscontrol, which was renamed skyguide in the process. Skyguide thus became the first air navigation service provider in Europe to control the whole of its country's airspace.

On 1 July 2002, a Tupolev Tu-154 of BAL Bashkirian Airlines of the Republic of Bashkortostan in Russia and a Boeing 757 of DHL Express collided in Überlingen near the German-Swiss border at an altitude of 12,000 metres in skyguide-controlled Southern German airspace. 71 people died.[12] Four skyguide employees were subsequently sentenced by a court. On 24 February 2004, Peter Nielsen, the air traffic controller who had been on duty at the time, was stabbed to death by Vitaly Kaloyev, who had lost his wife and two children in the accident.[13]

On 21 September 2005, skyguide became one of Europe's first air navigation service providers to be certificated companywide to the ISO 9001:2000 norm. In achieving this, skyguide also met the requirement for Single European Sky (SES) certification.[14]

On 15 March 2006, skyguide was adjudged to have not met the requirements for operating a single control centre for Switzerland's upper airspace. The project concerned did, however, allow the management of Geneva's upper airspace to be gradually made 'stripless' from 2005 onwards. Skyguide has since been pursuing the strategy of merging its two en-route centres into one virtual entity (the Virtual Centre).

On 20 December 2006, the Swiss Federal Office of Civil Aviation (FOCA) awarded skyguide its certification for the Single European Sky (SES).[15]

At the beginning of 2010, six states (including Switzerland) signed an international agreement legally establishing Functional Airspace Block Europe Central (FABEC) as part of Europe's endeavours to create a Single European Sky.

On 29 August 2016, an F/A-18C of the Fliegerstaffel 17 crashed in the Susten Pass in central Switzerland during a training mission. The pilot was found dead.[16] As a cause, an incorrect altitude instruction of the Skyguide Controller in Tower Meiringen is assumed.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Alex Bristol officially takes over as CEO of skyguide". www.skyguide.ch. from the original on 10 September 2017. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
  2. ^ "Contact & Locations - skyguide". www.skyguide.ch. from the original on 30 December 2016. Retrieved 29 December 2016.
  3. ^ Skyguide, Geschäftsbericht 2016 23 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine.
  4. ^ "Military & Defence - skyguide". www.skyguide.ch. from the original on 30 December 2016. Retrieved 29 December 2016.
  5. ^ "Virtual Centre - skyguide". www.skyguide.ch. from the original on 29 December 2016. Retrieved 29 December 2016.
  6. ^ "Satellite-based navigation - skyguide". www.skyguide.ch. from the original on 29 December 2016. Retrieved 29 December 2016.
  7. ^ "Solar Impulse 2 - skyguide". www.skyguide.ch. from the original on 30 December 2016. Retrieved 29 December 2016.
  8. ^ Büro für Flugunfalluntersuchungen (BFU), Schlussbericht über die Radarsysteme von Skyguide 2 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Citation error. Mouse-over '[verification needed]' for pop-up msg. [verification needed]
  10. ^ Sandro., Fehr (1 January 2014). Die Erschliessung der dritten Dimension Entstehung und Entwicklung der zivilen Luftfahrtinfrastruktur in der Schweiz, 1919-1990. Chronos. ISBN 9783034012287. OCLC 867875915.
  11. ^ a b "History - skyguide". www.skyguide.ch. from the original on 30 December 2016. Retrieved 29 December 2016.
  12. ^ Nunes & Laursen. (PDF). Archived from the original on 4 February 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  13. ^ D. Turney, Robin (2007). (PDF). IChemE SYMPOSIUM SERIES. 153: 1–5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 June 2015. Retrieved 29 December 2016.
  14. ^ Citation error. Mouse-over '[verification needed]' for pop-up msg. [verification needed]
  15. ^ Annual Report 2006. skyguide. 2006. p. 7. Skyguide was awarded Single European Sky (SES) certification by the Swiss Federal Office of Civil Aviation (FOCA) at the end of December 2006, confirming the compliance of our safety management with all European requirements. We were delighted to secure this: we have been steadily developing our safety management system for some years now, working consistently towards this certification goal in 2006 and have thus achieved a key strategic objective.
  16. ^ "Military pilot found dead after plane crash". 31 August 2016. from the original on 17 March 2017. Retrieved 14 February 2017.

External links edit

  • Website of skyguide
  • Air Traffic Controller recruiting page at skyguide, Switzerland.
  • Nacktes Chaos bei skyguide 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, BAZL criticises the management of the Swiss air navigation service massively, NZZ on Sunday, 9 April 2006 (German)

skyguide, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, major, contributor, this, article, appears, have, close, connection, with, subject, require, cleanup, comply, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject It may require cleanup to comply with Wikipedia s content policies particularly neutral point of view Please discuss further on the talk page December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations September 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Skyguide news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable independent third party sources December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Skyguide Swiss Air Navigation Services Ltd is an air navigation service provider which manages and monitors Swiss airspace The company which was formerly known as Swisscontrol changed its name to skyguide officially written lowercase in 2001 Skyguide is a joint stock company under Swiss private law which is responsible on behalf of the Swiss Confederation for ensuring the safety of all Swiss airspace and of adjoining airspace areas in Germany Austria France and Italy that have been delegated to its control For Swiss airspace this duty extends to both civil and military air navigation services Skyguide Logo Skyguide is subject to the supervisory authority of the Swiss Federal Department of the Environment Transport Energy and Communications DETEC Its principal shareholder is the Swiss Confederation which holds 99 91 of its share capital The company employs some 1 500 people around two thirds of them in the provision of air navigation services a quarter in technical services and the rest mainly in administration Alex Bristol the current CEO assumed his duties on 1 July 2017 1 Skyguide is headquartered in Meyrin near Geneva Airport 2 Contents 1 Skyguide in figures 2 Military tasks 3 Innovation 4 Locations 4 1 Radar stations 5 Collaborations in Europe 6 History 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksSkyguide in figures editSkyguide managed some 1 198 663 instrument flight rules IFR flights through its airspace in 2016 an average of around 3 285 flights a day and generated total annual operating revenue of over CHF 455 million Switzerland s air navigation service provider currently employs some 1 500 personnel spread over 14 locations throughout the country Two thirds of them are in air navigation services around a quarter are in technical functions and most of the rest hold administrative positions 3 Military tasks editSkyguide s most important partners are the Swiss Air Force Switzerland s air policing and defence are the responsibility of the Swiss Air Force which with its primary radars can also detect flying objects not emitting a transponder signal Skyguide is unusual however in that in addition to its civil air traffic management role the company also provides Switzerland s military air navigation services 4 Skyguide s military controllers have all completed their basic civil air traffic controller training In addition these controllers will also have had additional training for military airport operations or in tactical fighter control Normally they work as civilian employees alongside military personnel but if required e g for the annual World Economic Forum in Davos they will perform duties within the military operation Skyguide manages Swiss airspace dynamically together with the Swiss Air Force according to current military or civil needs In some cases skyguide s military controllers may also guide fighters in the so called cross border areas in France or Italy So military airspace may also extend beyond national borders and be used by the air forces of the two countries concerned Innovation editStripless Since 2015 skyguide has adopted a harmonized stripless system at both its control centres en route amp lower airspace sectors The benefits here include increased heads up time shorter and safe handovers as well as providing voice traffic with additional digital support Virtual Centre In consolidating its air traffic control centres virtually instead of physically with all the latter s political social and economic ramifications skyguide is generating a new paradigm in air navigation services The Virtual Centre model promises substantial benefits in terms of operational flexibility business continuity and cost effective technical evolution 5 Satellite based navigation The potential for further developing conventional navigation systems based on expensive terrestrial equipment is reaching its limits So if flight procedures are to be further refined new technologies are required One such technology is satellite based navigation which offers more possibilities than conventional navigation systems and provides a promising foundation for innovative new approaches and departure procedures One of the key advantages of this new technology is the greater positional accuracy it provides This in turn offers several further benefits with the promise of more efficient air traffic handling lower fuel consumption fewer pollutant emissions and less noise too 6 Solar Impulse Skyguide actively supported the pioneering Solar Impulse venture in its round the world flight providing air traffic services during test flights aeronautical publications and a 24 7 helpdesk throughout both the voyage and the years leading up to it Skyguide shares Solar Impulse s passion for a more sustainable aviation industry and is proud to have served as a facilitator here 7 Locations edit nbsp Skyguide HQ Geneva nbsp Skyguide Air Traffic Control Center amp Air Force HQ at Wangen Skyguide s main operating locations are its two operations centres one next to Dubendorf Air Force Base in Wangen Bruttisellen near Zurich and the other near Geneva Airport at Meyrin The latter is also home to the company s administrative head office The Wangen centre came into operation in February 2009 The centre is responsible for the airspace above German speaking Switzerland Lichtenstein Western Austria and parts of Southern Germany It is also home to the company s Aeronautical Information Services and to the Skyguide Training Center which has two tower simulators and further facilities for the real time training of air traffic controllers and other air navigation services personnel for both skyguide and foreign air navigation service providers The premises also accommodate the peacetime operations centre and air surveillance center of the Swiss Air Force Skyguide s Geneva centre is responsible for Western Swiss airspace the airspace above the French Alps and part of Italian airspace on the border with France Skyguide maintains further operations at Bern Belp Buochs Grenchen Lugano Agno and St Gallen Altenrhein regional airports and at numerous all military or joint civil military airfields These include Alpnach Dubendorf Emmen Locarno Meiringen Payerne and Sion At Les Eplatures regional airport the air traffic services have been delegated to the airport operator Radar stations edit nbsp Radar on Lagern near Boppelsen Skyguide uses nine radar stations for civil air traffic control 8 Two own wide ranging secondary radar stations also referred to as en route radar stations with locations above the Zurich community Boppelsen on the Jura hillside Lagern and on the La Dole Wide ranging secondary radar dates from the Swiss Air Force FLORAKO radar TG in Ticino on Mt Scopi Two own combined primary and secondary radar also referred to as Approach radar stations at the airports of Geneva in Cointrin and Zurich on the Klotener Holberg for landing and take off guidance Four foreign radar stations to complete the national radar coverage in Switzerland and to provide air traffic to neighboring air traffic controllers with locations in Cirfontaine and Nevers France Gosheim Germany and Monte Lesima Italy Collaborations in Europe editSkyguide s partners are the International Civil Aviation Organization ICAO Eurocontrol Europe s umbrella air navigation services organization and the Civil Air Navigation Services Organisation CANSO Europe s airspace is highly fragmented today The Single European Sky SES project of the European Commission is intended to harmonize the continent s air traffic management systems and in doing so enhance the efficiency of the overall airspace structure And one prerequisite for this in addition to tailoring airways more closely to users requirements rather than basing them on national borders is the creation of a series of large integrated airspace blocks Skyguide is a member of Functional Airspace Block Europe Central FABEC 9 which controls some 55 of all the air traffic handled in Europe or around 5 3 million flights a year The six FABEC member states Belgium France Germany Luxembourg the Netherlands and Switzerland signed the corresponding international agreement in December 2010 laying the legal foundation for the new airspace entity Skyguide s main contribution to the defragmentation of European airspace however is its concept to consolidate existing air navigation centres into a virtual entity the Virtual Centre History editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Skyguide traces its origins back to 1922 when after the First World War had demonstrated the importance of telecommunications Switzerland concluded an agreement with the Marconi company Swiss subsidiary Marconi Radio AG was founded on 23 February of that year to develop wireless telegraphy On 10 May 1928 the company name was changed to Radio Schweiz AG RSAG to emphasize its Swiss national character And on 1 January 1931 the Swiss Confederation mandated Radio Schweiz to provide air navigation services in Switzerland 10 11 Up until the end of the Second World War Radio Schweiz was primarily engaged in meeting the telegraphic communications needs of the Swiss Confederation Only on 21 December 1948 after concluding an agreement under which the Confederation and the country s airports would bear the costs of air navigation services did Radio Schweiz start to monitor Swiss airspace 11 On 1 January 1989 Radio Schweiz s air navigation activities were restructured and brought into the new Swisscontrol company whose headquarters were in Bern Swisscontrol was converted into a public limited company in 1996 and its headquarters were transferred from Bern to Geneva At the beginning of 2001 military air navigation services which had been provided separately until then were also placed under the responsibility of Swisscontrol which was renamed skyguide in the process Skyguide thus became the first air navigation service provider in Europe to control the whole of its country s airspace On 1 July 2002 a Tupolev Tu 154 of BAL Bashkirian Airlines of the Republic of Bashkortostan in Russia and a Boeing 757 of DHL Express collided in Uberlingen near the German Swiss border at an altitude of 12 000 metres in skyguide controlled Southern German airspace 71 people died 12 Four skyguide employees were subsequently sentenced by a court On 24 February 2004 Peter Nielsen the air traffic controller who had been on duty at the time was stabbed to death by Vitaly Kaloyev who had lost his wife and two children in the accident 13 On 21 September 2005 skyguide became one of Europe s first air navigation service providers to be certificated companywide to the ISO 9001 2000 norm In achieving this skyguide also met the requirement for Single European Sky SES certification 14 On 15 March 2006 skyguide was adjudged to have not met the requirements for operating a single control centre for Switzerland s upper airspace The project concerned did however allow the management of Geneva s upper airspace to be gradually made stripless from 2005 onwards Skyguide has since been pursuing the strategy of merging its two en route centres into one virtual entity the Virtual Centre On 20 December 2006 the Swiss Federal Office of Civil Aviation FOCA awarded skyguide its certification for the Single European Sky SES 15 At the beginning of 2010 six states including Switzerland signed an international agreement legally establishing Functional Airspace Block Europe Central FABEC as part of Europe s endeavours to create a Single European Sky On 29 August 2016 an F A 18C of the Fliegerstaffel 17 crashed in the Susten Pass in central Switzerland during a training mission The pilot was found dead 16 As a cause an incorrect altitude instruction of the Skyguide Controller in Tower Meiringen is assumed See also editSwiss air defense Federal Office of Civil AviationReferences edit Alex Bristol officially takes over as CEO of skyguide www skyguide ch Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved 10 September 2017 Contact amp Locations skyguide www skyguide ch Archived from the original on 30 December 2016 Retrieved 29 December 2016 Skyguide Geschaftsbericht 2016 Archived 23 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine Military amp Defence skyguide www skyguide ch Archived from the original on 30 December 2016 Retrieved 29 December 2016 Virtual Centre skyguide www skyguide ch Archived from the original on 29 December 2016 Retrieved 29 December 2016 Satellite based navigation skyguide www skyguide ch Archived from the original on 29 December 2016 Retrieved 29 December 2016 Solar Impulse 2 skyguide www skyguide ch Archived from the original on 30 December 2016 Retrieved 29 December 2016 Buro fur Flugunfalluntersuchungen BFU Schlussbericht uber die Radarsysteme von Skyguide Archived 2 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine Citation error Mouse over verification needed for pop up msg verification needed Sandro Fehr 1 January 2014 Die Erschliessung der dritten Dimension Entstehung und Entwicklung der zivilen Luftfahrtinfrastruktur in der Schweiz 1919 1990 Chronos ISBN 9783034012287 OCLC 867875915 a b History skyguide www skyguide ch Archived from the original on 30 December 2016 Retrieved 29 December 2016 Nunes amp Laursen IDENTIFYING THE FACTORS THAT CONTRIBUTED TO THE UEBERLINGEN MIDAIR COLLISION PDF Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link D Turney Robin 2007 THE UBERLINGEN MID AIR COLLISION LESSONS FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF CONTROL ROOMS IN THE PROCESS INDUSTRIES PDF IChemE SYMPOSIUM SERIES 153 1 5 Archived from the original PDF on 28 June 2015 Retrieved 29 December 2016 Citation error Mouse over verification needed for pop up msg verification needed Annual Report 2006 skyguide 2006 p 7 Skyguide was awarded Single European Sky SES certification by the Swiss Federal Office of Civil Aviation FOCA at the end of December 2006 confirming the compliance of our safety management with all European requirements We were delighted to secure this we have been steadily developing our safety management system for some years now working consistently towards this certification goal in 2006 and have thus achieved a key strategic objective Military pilot found dead after plane crash 31 August 2016 Archived from the original on 17 March 2017 Retrieved 14 February 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Skyguide Website of skyguide Air Traffic Controller recruiting page at skyguide Switzerland Nacktes Chaos bei skyguide Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine BAZL criticises the management of the Swiss air navigation service massively NZZ on Sunday 9 April 2006 German Portals nbsp Switzerland nbsp Companies nbsp Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Skyguide amp oldid 1215226764, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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