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Groundbreaking roadmap for aircraft of the future released – UK Civil Aviation Authority

Published on June 18th, 2025
2 Minute Read
Groundbreaking roadmap for aircraft of the future released – UK Civil Aviation Authority
  • Landmark roadmap established between national aviation authorities from the UK, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States.
  • It aims to ensure safety, foster collaboration, and promote technological innovation.
  • It also aims to streamline the certification and validation process for new aircraft types across international boundaries.

Across much of the world, Advanced Air Mobility (AAM) aircraft, including electric vertical take-off, are set to be certified in a unified and streamlined way in the future following a landmark roadmap established between national aviation authorities from Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

The Roadmap for Advanced Air Mobility Aircraft Type Certification was released today and is available via the UK Civil Aviation Authority website.

It aims to ensure safety, foster collaboration, promote technological innovation, and streamline the certification and validation process for new aircraft types across international boundaries.

It was developed collaboratively by representatives from the Australian Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA), Transport Canada (TC), the New Zealand Civil Aviation Authority (NZ CAA), the United Kingdom’s Civil Aviation Authority (UK CAA) and the United States Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).

Sophie O’Sullivan, Director of Future of Flight at the UK Civil Aviation Authority, said:

Aircraft type certification is a process that ensures a particular type of aircraft meets all the necessary safety and airworthiness standards set by aviation regulatory authorities.

Currently, traditional aircraft are type-certified in the country of design using internationally harmonised airworthiness certification standards. Countries then validate the aircraft against these standards before the aircraft can be operated in other nations.

However, with new AAM aircraft types, there are differences in certification standards emerging across the world. The roadmap acknowledges these differences and provides a framework to converge and harmonise these standards to streamline validation and entry of AAM aircraft into multiple markets.

Vincent Lambercy
Vincent started working in ATM in 2000 and brings his Air Traffic Management experience to the team. Having founded FoxATM after working 17 years with ANSPs in technical and sales roles; within ANSPs and the ATM industry. He has strong technical and commercial experience in international projects.
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