Thank you, sir, and good afternoon, everybody.
I am about 100 kilos and several millions of dollars short of the real Dan Marino, but I wish I had them.
It is an honour to be here this afternoon. I think I could use my time in a most useful manner by providing the committee with the briefest of pictures as to what ICAO, the International Civil Aviation Organization, is.
I believe the best way to describe ICOA is to say it is the specialized aviation agency of the United Nations. We are part of the UN system. Our basic mandate is set in a document called the Chicago Convention. It's a broad blueprint of how to conduct the business of international civil aviation in a safe, efficient, and orderly manner.
The organization was created back in 1944, in Chicago, so we've been in existence for over 60 years now.
The Chicago Convention is our guiding document. The actual implementation of the actual business of harmonizing safety in international civil aviation is conducted through the application of the requirements in 18 annexes to the convention. Each annex to the convention refers to a particular component of the aviation system. Annex 1 refers to personal licensing, annex 2 refers to rules of the air, annex 3 refers to meteorology, and so on and so forth.
Our basic job, on a day-to-day basis, is keeping these annexes to the convention up to date. These annexes define the standards and recommended practices that states have to follow in order to be members of this universal partnership.
The important thing to highlight here is that as long as a state is involved in international aviation operations, the state in question has to follow the standards in the different annexes. The states may file differences with the standards in the annexes, but it's not a ticket out of compliance. The differences can only be applied for domestic operations. The moment you're engaged in international operations, you must follow these standards.
The subject of interest to this committee, or at least to this session, safety management systems, is contained in standards that are included in three of these annexes. They are annex 6, which refers to the international operation of aircraft; annex 11, which refers to air traffic services, and that includes both air traffic control and air traffic management; and lastly, annex 14, which deals with aerodromes.
In order to implement these standards, we publish a diversity of materials, including manuals and circulars, and occasionally we get involved in training, as in the case of safety management systems.
My closing remark is to re-emphasize the point that compliance with this standard, this universal standard, is not something you might or might not elect to do; you have to do it. So there's quite a force behind these standards.
Thank you, sir.