Rusty Pilots Making Flying Errors Is Next Aviation Headache

  • Lion Air runway excursion report cites pilot proficiency issue
  • Almost a third of world’s passenger jets remain in storage
The Asia Pacific Aircraft Storage Facility in Alice Springs, Australia, Oct. 23.Photographer: David Gray/Bloomberg
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On Sept. 15, an Indonesian flight carrying 307 passengers and 11 crew to the northern city of Medan momentarily veered off the runway after landing, sparking an investigation by the country’s transport safety regulator. It found the pilot had flown less than three hours in the previous 90 days. The first officer hadn’t flown at all since Feb. 1.

The incident underlines an emerging risk from the coronavirus pandemic: pilots aren’t getting enough opportunity to fly because airlines have grounded planes and scaled back operations due to a slump in demand for air travel.