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Welcome to the official website of the NCCAA (or NCAA). All on this site is copyright(c) to the Nanako Transport and Building Ministry
Newscast
Recent Regulations and Guidelines
- 36-4D - Noise Standards: Aircraft Type and Airworthiness Certification (10/12/2017)
- 65-34 - NCCAA-Approved Aircraft Dispatcher Certification Courses (10/11/2017)
- 90-117 - Data Link Communications (10/3/2017)
- 121-37A - Voluntary Disclosure Reporting Program - Hazardous Materials (9/29/2017)
More on nccaa.gov.nk/regulations
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Welcome to the official website of the Nanako Commercial & Civilian Aviation Authority. Find here all the information and current events on Nanako air traffic. If you are a civilian pilot, do not hesitate to log in to your personal space by logging in with your aircraft identification or phone number. If you are looking for information on procedures or flight legislation, we would ask you to visit: nccaa.gov.nk/regulations
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Enjoy your visit.
Fly safely!
NCCAA logo
Formed :August 23, 1953
Jurisdiction : Nanako Government
Headquarters : 800 Hokkaido Avenue, Waterpoo
Annual budget : NP15.956 billion (FY2017)
Agency executives : Michael Petterson, Administrator
Iov Satlalinskov, Deputy Administrator
Parent agency : Minister of Transport and Building
The NCCAA was created in 1953 after the declaration of Nanako's independence to ensure air safety of Nanako's airspace in a 20th century of transportation changes. It showed its effectiveness in the early years by launching the construction of nearly a dozen airports across the country. This major project boosted the construction industry, employing hundreds of contractors. In 1970, Nanak airports were almost all built in the 1960s. A major modernization plan was undertaken by the government. Thanks to the help of French and Japanese engineers, the airports of Nanako can now accommodate the new masses of traveler's.
The geographical location of Nanako is such that air traffic is widely used. Each of the 24 islands in the archipelago has at least one airport used once a day (excluding overseas territories). Today, nearly 3,000 flights are taking place every day, linking the 341 airfields on the island. 63% of these flights are domestic flights and the remaining 37% are international flights. 40% of international flights come from neighboring countries such as South Korea, Japan, Russia or even China. Since 2000, nearly 51,000 flights have flown through Nanako airspace and since the creation of the NCCAA, there are about 73,365,000 aircraft that have been flown in the sky of Nanako. Even if the sky seems overcrowded and therefore with strong possibilities of accident, Nanako air safety is one of the most reliable in the world. The percentage of fatal accidents in the airspace of Nanako is 0.000013% whether 1 fatal accident all 73,300,000 flights. It is one of the most important security rates in the world. Since 2000, there have been 300 cases of incidents of 51,000 flights or 0.58% of non-fatal crashes
The NCCAA's roles include:
- Regulating Nanako commercial airspace transportation
- Regulating air navigation facilities' geometric and flight inspection standards
- Encouraging and developing civil aeronautics, including new aviation technology
- Issuing, suspending, or revoking pilot certificates
- Regulating civil aviation to promote Transportation safety in the Nanako Islands, especially through local offices called Flight Standards District Offices
- Developing and operating a system of air traffic control and navigation for both civil and military aircraft
- Researching and developing the National Airspace System and civil aeronautics
- Developing and carrying out programs to control aircraft noise and other environmental effects of civil aviation