Avinor boss will make his own hometown Bodo Norway flytårnsentral and move a hundred air traffic controllers there. It is contrary to the advice of Avinor professionals.
The article is added to your reading list.
AvinorFjernstyrte tower Governmental Avinor shall through a major modernization the next few years, and it’s partly about betting a billions on new technology in the airline industry. Over 200 jobs are affected and will be between 100 and 200 a few years.
Avinor has been involved in developing the technology for so-called “remote tower.” That tower services at several airports may end up at one place. The planes on the ground and in the lower airspace will be routed from one node using camera and radar technology. Avinor believes that tower services at 36 airports can be collected in one place, and the Board shall determine.
DN knows that the academic community in the subsidiary Avinor Air Navigation has recommended to add the new tower center to Vaernes at Trondheim. The other options, Gardermoen and Bodø, was ranked by Trondheim. At a board meeting in Avinor Group in February, Avinor CEO Dag Falk-Petersen have gone against the recommendation of the academic community, and set about adding the new center to Bodø.
No comments:
Post a Comment