During a meeting between the co-chairs of the Bilateral Oversight Board (BOB) at the Federal Aviation Administration's (FAA) Headquarters in Washington, D.C., the officials with FAA and the European Union (EU) signed two decisions associated with the Airworthiness Annex of the U.S./EU Safety Agreement.
The first decision enables reductions of the EU‘s European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) fees for validation of U.S. aerospace products. This achievement is the culmination of a multi-year effort to reduce duplication of efforts by the FAA and EASA, and to lower EASA fees on U.S. industry to be more commensurate with that reduced level of effort. The decision covers simple design modifications such as Basic Supplemental Type Certificates. Fee reductions will take effect 30 days from the contract signing (March 8, 2019).
The second decision amends the U.S./EU Safety Agreement to remove country specific limitations associated with aeronautical products and parts eligible for import into the United States. This amendment treats all EU Member States equally under the agreement and recognizes EASA's oversight and standardization processes throughout their jurisdiction.
“The FAA is fully committed to mutually working together with our international partners to improve aviation oversight and management,” said FAA Associate Administrator for Aviation Safety and BOB Co-chair Ali Bahrami. “These agreements are a win, win for both the United States and Europe by providing greater access to aerospace markets, products and services.”