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NTSB: Better Fuel Management Could Prevent 50 GA Crashes a Year

Sep 11, 2017
Fuel mismanagement is one of the leading causes of general aviation accidents in the U.S.

About 50 general aviation accidents a year could be prevented if pilots were better at fuel management, the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) says.

In Safety Alert 067, issued in late August, the NTSB said that fuel mismanagement was the sixth-leading cause of general aviation accidents in the United States. An analysis of general aviation accidents from 2011 through 2015 found that fuel exhaustion (in which an aircraft runs out of fuel) accounted for 56 percent of fuel-related accidents, and fuel starvation (in which fuel is in the aircraft’s tanks but does not reach the engine) accounted for 35 percent.

Ninety-five percent of all fuel management–related accidents were associated with pilot error, while equipment issues contributed to the remaining 5 percent, the NTSB said.

Data showed that general aviation pilots with private pilot or sport pilot certificates were involved in half of the fuel-related accidents, those with commercial or air transport pilot …

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