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Brexit and UK licences

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Old 19th Jul 2018, 20:14
  #61 (permalink)  
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Thank you for these news !
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Old 25th Jul 2018, 11:32
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Superflanker, thanks for your post.

At least both EASA and the EU Commission are aware of this problem - hopefully a sensible solution that satisfies all parties can be found soon!

Meanwhile, the UK CAA has published this on their website (sorry guys, i’m a newbee and can’t post links yet!):

To help organisations with their own planning for EU exit, we have listed the assumptions that we used to develop our approach for a potential non-negotiated withdrawal from the EU in March 2019.

These assumptions are not representative of the CAA’s view of the most likely, or desirable, outcome of negotiations and do not reflect Government policy, but allow us as a responsible regulator to prepare for all possible scenarios. In a non-negotiated outcome at March 2019, we have assumed that:
  • The UK leaves the EU at 11 pm on 29 March 2019.
  • Through the EU (Withdrawal) Act 2018, the UK adopts all European aviation laws at the point of exit. Changes will be made to ensure those laws are legally operable.
  • The UK continues to mirror EU aviation regulations for at least a two year period.
  • The UK withdraws completely from the EASA system in March 2019, meaning that the CAA will need to make arrangements to fulfil regulatory functions without having EASA as a technical agent and without having access to EASA and EU-level capabilities.
  • The UK is no longer included in EU-level Bilateral Aviation Safety Agreements.
  • There is no mutual recognition agreement between the EU and the UK for aviation licences, approvals and certificates.
  • UK-issued EASA licences and approvals are no longer recognised in the EU post-EU exit.
  • The EU treats UK airlines as Third Country Operators.
  • All licences issued by the CAA under EU legislation, and all type approval certificates and third country approvals issued by EASAunder EU legislation, will continue to have validity under UK law, if they were effective immediately before exit day.
  • The UK minimises additional requirements for licences, approvals and certificates from EU aviation and aerospace companies providing services and goods in the UK.
Hopefully all of this can be avoided, really hope so!
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Old 4th Jul 2019, 23:25
  #63 (permalink)  
 
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ATPL EXAMS

Hi everyone, I was wondering if anyone could give me an example on how hard the exams are? Is the maths and stuff on university level or lower?
Zulfikar Bektas is offline  

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