The Influence of Artificial Intelligence on Aviation — FlySafair Goes Beyond the Cockpit
The image is a familiar one, straight out of a Hollywood
script: an airplane in distress, a heroic figure battling through the cockpit
door, only to find no human pilot at the helm. It's a scene that once seemed
purely fictional, but with today's advancements in artificial intelligence
(AI), the question arises: how close are we to AI-piloted flights? Kirby
Gordon, Chief Marketing Officer at FlySafair, sheds some light on this
intriguing subject.
While autopilot systems have been trusted companions in
aviation for years, the dawn of fully autonomous, AI-piloted aircraft still
lies beyond the horizon. However, the progress in AI technology is undeniably
reshaping the aviation landscape. Not unlike many other industries, there are
two spaces where AI’s transformative
effects are most clear.
Firstly, AI can execute routine tasks, ones that
traditionally require human oversight, with an impressive level of autonomy, freeing
people up to tackle more challenging tasks. Secondly, AI's prowess in analysing
vast amounts of data is unparalleled. More impressive is its capacity to mine
data for insights, enabling more informed and strategic decision-making.
But, technological leap is not heralding a new industrial
revolution. Rather it is refining the current one, enhancing efficiency and
service quality in aviation. For instance, airlines including FlySafair, KLM,
and United are harnessing AI for customer service, rapidly providing accurate
responses to inquiries across various digital platforms.
Changi Airport in Singapore recent incorporation of AI technology also exemplifies the potential use of technology. Their integration of AI during check-in and boarding processes has eliminated the need for human intervention. This means human employees are freed to tackle more cognitively demanding tasks or complex processes.
The excitement continues beyond customer interaction. AI's
data interpretation skills are revolutionising preventative maintenance. Flight data is recorded and
interpreted by airlines for every flight, offering a wealth of detailed
information on the intersection between aircraft performance and operating
conditions.
The premise
of preventative maintenance is to utilise this data so that maintenance issues
can be identified before they arise and, thus, proactively addressed before
they result in a flight delay. The historical challenge is that the data set is
vast. While the professionals working in this area have made incredible
strides, it is very challenging to keep an informed overview of so much input.
This is where AI-driven technology really shines, scouring over this data in
fractions of the time, with a degree of thoroughness not known before, to spot
trends and surface the insights that may have previously been overlooked.
Another
area in which this capability will have a remarkable impact is cost
optimisation regarding schedule efficiency and fuel burn dynamics. Currently,
airlines are required to build intricate models that analyse vast quantities of
data to perform this kind of complex analysis. The insight advantage and data
crunching capacity of generative AI will play a fundamental role in optimising
airline operations into the future, reducing costs and emissions. This will not
only be good for consumers and the environment, it will also be excellent for
safety thanks to additional insights into prudent planning.
While the
reality of Robopilot may still be some while off, the impact of AI on modern
aviation is already being felt. The aviation industry has only scraped the
surface of the potential advantages that AI could provide to airlines and the
improvements that it could offer in both their operations and customer service.
A
big sore point in the AI conversation, especially in SA is how AI is going to
take people’s jobs. It is important we balance the conversation by including
some points on job creation.
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