
Japan revises aviation law after 2024 Haneda collision
Parliament passed a bill on Friday to revise the civil aviation law to make communication skills training mandatory for all pilots operating at busy airports, including private and Japan Coast Guard aircraft.
The revision, which will enter into force within three years, was drafted in response to a fatal accident in January last year in which Japan Airlines and coast guard aircraft collided and caught fire on a runway at Tokyo's Haneda Airport.
The bill passed the House of Councilors, the upper chamber of the Diet, at a plenary meeting Friday after clearing the House of Representatives, the lower chamber, earlier in May.
The training in question, called crew resource management, is conducted to improve skills for communication between the captain and the copilot and between the cockpit crew and air traffic controllers to prevent human errors such as runway incursions.
The coast guard conducts similar drills independently, but the revised law will make the practice mandatory.
The law also stipulates the establishment of a runway safety team at each of the country's eight major airports, including Haneda, in which air traffic controllers and airline officials discuss measures against incursions.
In an interim report on the accident released late last year, the Japan Transport Safety Board said that both the captain and the copilot of the coast guard aircraft thought that they had received permission to enter the runway.
Suspecting a problem with mutual confirmation procedures, the coast guard has revised its manual to ensure that pilots fully repeat instructions from controllers to confirm them between themselves.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NHK
2 hours ago
- NHK
Banner painter keeps father's eye-popping legacy alive
Iwaki Enobori banners are big, bold and bursting with color — perfect for marking Children's Day each May. They're hand-painted in Iwaki City, Fukushima Prefecture, where a fourth-generation artisan is picking up exactly where his father left off.


Kyodo News
3 hours ago
- Kyodo News
Japan calls for tariff rethink in talks with U.S. commerce chief
KYODO NEWS - 10 hours ago - 12:34 | All, World, Japan Japan's chief tariff negotiator Ryosei Akazawa reiterated during a meeting with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick on Thursday that higher import duties imposed by Washington should be reconsidered, as the countries continue negotiations toward a win-win deal. Akazawa is visiting the U.S. capital for the third straight week for another round of tariff talks at the ministerial level, hoping to smooth the way for a meeting of the countries' leaders in mid-June. Before his planned talks with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Friday, Akazawa sat down with Lutnick for nearly two hours to "strongly" urge the United States to reconsider the wave of tariff measures announced by President Donald Trump, according to the Japanese government. Akazawa and Lutnick discussed cooperation on trade, nontariff barriers and economic security, the Japanese side said. While continuing to demand the elimination of the higher tariffs, Japan is also weighing whether to accept a cut in the rates, with the United States resisting a full removal of the duties. Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and Trump plan to hold a meeting around the time of the three-day Group of Seven summit in Canada starting June 15. After meeting with Bessent and Lutnick last week, Akazawa said they had agreed their talks were "making progress." Akazawa, who is scheduled to leave Washington on Saturday, has declined to provide details, including in which areas progress has been made. Under Trump's so-called reciprocal tariff regime, announced April 2, almost all countries in the world have been hit by a baseline duty of 10 percent, with Japan facing an additional country-specific tariff of 14 percent for a total rate of 24 percent. Along with other countries, Japan has also been affected by the Trump administration's additional 25 percent tariff on automobiles and other sector-based levies implemented on national security grounds. Related coverage: Trump's steel tariff hike not raised in Japan-U.S. talks: negotiator Japan, U.S. agree tariff talks making progress toward deal Japan PM says mutual understanding "deepened" with Trump over tariffs

3 hours ago
Japan to Carry Over Imperial Family Talks to Next Diet Session
News from Japan Jun 6, 2025 23:03 (JST) Tokyo, June 6 (Jiji Press)--The leaders of Japan's two parliamentary chambers Friday confirmed that discussions on proposed Imperial Family will be carried over to the expected next extraordinary session of the Diet that may be held in autumn. House of Representatives Speaker Fukushiro Nukaga and House of Councillors President Masakazu Sekiguchi agreed to give up trying to form a consensus on plans to secure an adequate number of Imperial Family members during the current ordinary session slated to end on June 22. The agreement was made because ruling and opposition parties remain apart on the issue. The ruling and opposition camps started their discussions in May last year, focusing on the ideas of allowing female Imperial Family members to remain in the family even after marriage and adopting male members in the paternal line of former Imperial Family branches removed from the family in 1947. END [Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.] Jiji Press