WASHINGTON — Air carriers will be unable to fully meet deadlines to retrofit planes to avoid interference from the latest generation 5G C-Band wireless service, the aviation industry said Tuesday, urging the White House to help avert a standoff.
Concerns that 5G services could interfere with airplanes' altimeters, which give data on a plane's height above the ground and are crucial for bad-weather landing, led to disruptions at some U.S. airports earlier this year.
A letter signed by Airlines for America, Boeing, Airbus, Embraer, aviation unions, and others backed the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) request to mandate an extension of mitigation by wireless carriers as airlines retrofit radio altimeters.
"It is critical to extending these mitigations through the end of 2023 to allow airlines time to complete the retrofit," the letter said.
"Because of global supply chain issues, air carriers will not be able to fully meet either the December 2022 deadlines for smaller regional aircraft nor the July 2023 retrofit deadline," it added.
FAA acting Administrator Billy Nolen urged a delay in some 5G C-Band transmissions from smaller operators over aviation safety concerns. The aviation industry letter said that since January, the FAA has documented over 100 FAA incidents of potential 5G interference ... Unfortunately, the U.S. government agencies do not appear to be on the same page with respect to these safety issues.
Nolen said in his Oct. 21 letter that the FAA wants the Federal Communications Commission to mandate voluntary mitigations AT&T and Verizon agreed to earlier this year for 19 smaller telecoms and other spectrum holders.
The aviation letter Tuesday said inter-agency government progress appears to be a stalemate, while stakeholders are doing their part to address these issues."
Verizon and AT&T in June voluntarily agreed to delay some C-Band 5G usage until July 2023.
Airline CEOs on Jan. 17 had warned of an impending "catastrophic" aviation crisis that could ground almost all traffic because of the 5G deployment.
A deal struck shortly before a January deadline did not prevent dozens of foreign carriers from canceling international flights to the United States.
Via Reuters