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  • IATA Highlights Critical Priorities for Aviation Safety and Operations

    IATA Highlights Critical Priorities for Aviation Safety and Operations

    Translations: 国际航协强调航空安全与运行的关键优先事项 (pdf)

    L’IATA souligne les priorités essentielles pour la sécurité et les opérations aériennes (pdf)

    IATA destaca las prioridades para una aviación segura (pdf)

    Xiamen – The International Air Transport Association (IATA) highlighted three critical priorities for aviation safety and operations as the World Safety and Operations Conference (WSOC) opened today in Xiamen, China. These are: defending and evolving global standards, fostering a strong safety culture through leadership, and using data to enhance performance amid growing operational challenges.

    “The environment in which airlines operate has grown even more complex as conflicts and regulatory fragmentation have proliferated.  As a result, we have seen airspace closures, drone incursions and rising global navigation satellite system (GNNS) interference disrupt connectivity, undermine confidence, and threaten safety. Ensuring aviation remains the safest mode of transport requires strong leadership, robust adherence to global standards, and smarter use of data. By focusing on these—industry and government together—we will build a safer, more resilient and increasingly efficient global aviation system that can manage today’s risks and is prepared for those of tomorrow,” said Mark Searle, Global Director Safety, IATA.

    Defending and Advancing Global Standards

    Global standards are essential to aviation safety. Current standards must be adhered to and future standards must be developed to continuously improve industry safety performance. Currently, this focus revolves around:

    • Addressing GNSS Interference: Reports of GNSS interference have increased by more than 200% between 2021 and 2024. Neither spoofing nor jamming of GNSS systems is acceptable. Together with EASA, IATA has launched a GNSS Resilience Plan built on four priorities: monitoring and reporting, prevention tools, backup infrastructure, and civil–military coordination. The next step is for ICAO to advance these solutions through global standards, guidance, and reporting.
    • Protecting Aviation’s Radio Spectrum: The radio spectrum essential for aviation navigation, defined in ITU’s global standards, must be safeguarded. The rapid expansion of 5G, and soon 6G, is putting pressure on aviation’s allocations. In several markets, including Australia, Canada and the United States, 5G rollouts have created interference risks near airports and forced costly retrofits. Stronger coordination with telecommunications regulators and realistic timelines for mitigation are urgently needed, along with the development of more resilient on-board systems.
    • Timely Accident Investigation Reporting: Global standards under Annex 13 of the Chicago Convention clearly define the need for timely accident investigations. Yet, only 58% of accidents between 2019 and 2023 have produced a final report. Delays hinder the industry’s ability to learn vital safety lessons and create space for speculation and misinformation. IATA continues to remind governments of their obligations while recognizing progress, such as the prompt preliminary reports issued following recent accidents in India, South Korea, and the United States.

    Using Data to Enhance Performance

     

    Data is transforming aviation safety, delivering the insights needed to anticipate risks and enhance performance. Through the Global Aviation Data Management (GADM) program, which integrates the Flight Data eXchange (FDX), Incident Data eXchange (IDX), and Maintenance Cost Data eXchange (MCX), IATA is enabling data-driven decision-making across airlines and regulators.

    Areas where data is making a difference include:

    • Turbulence Aware: IATA’s Turbulence Aware platform shares data in real-time, enabling pilots and dispatchers to mitigate the risks stemming from inflight turbulence. Participation in the platform grew 25% over the past year, with 3,200 aircraft including Air France, Etihad, and SAS now sharing real-time turbulence data to enhance flight safety and efficiency.
    • Predictive safety insights: The SafetyIS database, drawing on in-flight data from 217 airlines, enables predictive analysis. For example, early identification of a spike in collision-avoidance alerts at a Latin American airport allowed swift action to reduce risks.
    • Risk-based IOSA: The risk-based IOSA audit model is well-established in using data to tailor audits to each airline’s operational profile. Already it has resulted in more than 8,000 corrective actions that are strengthening safety.

    Fostering a Strong Safety Culture Through Leadership

    Leadership is central to a strong aviation safety culture. Strong safety leadership creates an environment where employees are empowered to raise concerns and are confident that issues will be resolved quickly and effectively.

    To reinforce this, IATA has developed two key initiatives:

    • Safety Leadership Charter: Promoting eight core principles of safety leadership, the Charter now covers around 90% of global traffic, strengthening a culture built on leadership, global standards, and data.
    • IATA Connect: Bringing together 5,600 users from over 600 organizations, IATA Connect enables access to IOSA documentation, the Safety Issue Hub, and Safety Connect, and will soon expand to include ISAGO users.  

     

    For more information, please contact:
    Corporate Communications
    Tel: +41 22 770 2967
    Email: corpcomms@iata.org

    Notes for Editors:

    • IATA (International Air Transport Association) represents some 350 airlines comprising over 80% of global air traffic.
    • You can follow us on X for announcements, policy positions, and other useful industry information.
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  • CancerVax Precision Therapy Successfully Avoids Healthy

    CancerVax Precision Therapy Successfully Avoids Healthy

    Lehi, Oct. 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Lehi, Utah, October 14, 2025 – CancerVax, Inc., the developer of a breakthrough universal cancer treatment platform that uses the body’s immune system to treat cancer, today announced that recent…

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  • Mureka Unveils Music Agent Studio and Enhanced API

    Mureka Unveils Music Agent Studio and Enhanced API

    SINGAPORE, Oct. 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Mureka, a global leader in AI music creation, announced the launch of Music Agent Studio alongside significant API enhancements, making professional music creation accessible to everyone. The dual…

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  • IOC and World Olympians Association strengthen their partnership to better support Olympians

    IOC and World Olympians Association strengthen their partnership to better support Olympians

    Building on the IOC’s longstanding support of the WOA, the Agreement is aimed at:

    • enhancing the engagement and support for Olympians
    • strengthening the collaboration between the two organisations; and
    • strengthening the good governance which…

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  • How To Find Comets Lemmon And SWAN On Wednesday

    How To Find Comets Lemmon And SWAN On Wednesday

    Topline

    Two comets are becoming visible in the night sky this week, with experts predicting they will become even brighter next week during the peak of the Orionid meteor shower. The brightest is Comet Lemmon — also called C/2025 A6 (Lemmon) —…

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  • Actors trained during pandemic lack vocal power and range, says RSC leader | Acting

    Actors trained during pandemic lack vocal power and range, says RSC leader | Acting

    Young actors who trained at drama school during the pandemic are struggling to project their voices and lack range

    because they were denied the crucial “experience of full vocal and physical presence” within a theatre, the co-artistic director…

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  • Shapeshifting ‘braided river’ in Tibet is the highest in the world, and is becoming increasingly unstable — Earth from space

    Shapeshifting ‘braided river’ in Tibet is the highest in the world, and is becoming increasingly unstable — Earth from space

    QUICK FACTS

    Where is it? Yarlung Zangbo River, Tibet Autonomous Region of China [29.2814054, 91.3256581]

    What’s in the photo? The braided branches of a river winding through the Tibetan Plateau

    Which satellite took the photo? Landsat 9

    When was it…

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  • Pokemon TCG Pocket Anniversary Update Brings Massive Trading Overhaul and New Content

    Pokemon TCG Pocket Anniversary Update Brings Massive Trading Overhaul and New Content

    Pokemon TCG Pocket’s first anniversary is just a few weeks away, and it means more rewards, new features, and some jaw-dropping announcements coming our way. Well, that seems the case for now. The Pokemon Company has announced some new…

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  • A chance for peace in the Middle East and the U.S.-China trade war

    A chance for peace in the Middle East and the U.S.-China trade war

    U.S. President Donald Trump gestures as he poses next to a sign before a family photo at a world leaders’ summit on ending the Gaza war, amid a U.S.-brokered prisoner-hostage swap and ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas, in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, Oct. 13, 2025.

    Suzanne Plunkett | Reuters

    This might not be Christmas, but the war in the Middle East is over — at least according to U.S. President Donald Trump.

    On Monday, Trump declared at the Knesset, Israel's parliament, that the "long and painful nightmare" was finally over for both the Israelis and Palestinians. More straightforwardly, Trump gave an unequivocal "yes" when asked by reporters if the war in the Middle East has ended, Reuters reported.

    A similarly hopeful mood permeated markets, though for different reasons. After hitting China with 100% additional tariffs and triggering a sell-off on Friday, Trump appeared to walk back his stance, posting on Truth Social that "it will all be fine" with China.

    And thus was TACO back on traders' menus: Major U.S. stock indexes rebounded, with technology stocks leading the charge. Quantum computing names popped after JPMorgan Chase announced it will be investing $10 billion in sectors crucial to national interests.

    Broadcom, meanwhile, surged almost 10% after it jointly announced a partnership with — who else? — OpenAI to build and deploy custom chips. But where this puts Nvidia, OpenAI's other near and dear one, and on whose chips the ChatGPT maker relies, remains a question.

    Though Christmas has yet to arrive, OpenAI is starting to look like the tech sector's Santa Claus, who has his sack full of presents — and, more importantly, cash, according to Oracle.

    — CNBC's Holly Ellyatt contributed to this report.

    What you need to know today

    And finally...

    U.S. President Donald Trump shakes hands with Argentina's President Javier Milei during the 80th United Nations General Assembly, in New York City, New York, U.S., Sept. 23, 2025.

    Alexander Drago | Reuters

    The U.S. has stepped in with an extraordinary bailout of Argentina. Here's what it means

    In a move that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced Thursday on social media site X, the U.S. is providing a $20 billion currency swap line with Argentina's central bank — essentially exchanging stable U.S. dollars with volatile pesos.

    The move comes amid liquidity concerns in Argentina that threatened stability for the country as it faces key midterm elections. There are equal parts economic and political stakes with the venture, which marks the first U.S. intervention of this nature since rescuing Mexico in 1995.

    Jeff Cox


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