Being an IOSA certified airline indeed means you have reached a certain level of safety (good level), but not being certified does NOT necessarily mean you have not reached that level.
For a small airlines like WOW, being IOSA certified is nothing but a waste of money. Why? because passing IOSA costs a lot of money (around $60,000 for the audit organization only) in addition to other costs related to that. IOSA audit is mandatory now to be a part of IATA, but again, an airline like WOW does not need to be part of IATA, many other small airlines or even larger airlines (like Ryanair) chose not to because they do not benefit from it.
Most larger airlines will benefit from IOSA for many reasons, reputation is one of them, minimizing bilateral audits between airlines is another reason. So if X airlines wants to audit Z airlines before code sharing, they will just take permission to check their IOSA audit records instead of conducting their own audits as airlines used to do in the past, this will save money and time.
For many airlines, IOSA audits are nothing more than a way of making good money for IATA, I am saying this because IOSA audits only check the minimum required safety policies and procedures while most airlines (especially large ones) have much more strict safety policies.
Bottom line, as mentioned in the other answer, civil aviation authorities are responsible about enforcing safety policies, and EU has a very good one. So, as long as the airline is certified to work in EU then that’s a good sign.
BTW, I am a certified auditor from IATA and I know a thing or two about IOSA.
Airline safety is generally primarily enforced by the Government of the country/region where the airline is based. As WOW Air is based in Iceland, they would fall under the regulations of the Icelandic Civil Aviation Administration.
The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) provides guidelines on what countries should enforce as a part of a safety policy, and they also carry out safety audits on the country (but not specific airlines) to confirm that the country is meeting a minimum safety level.
They can also be further governed by the safety regulations of the countries that they fly to. As WOW Air flies to countries within the European Union, they would also fall under the The European Aviation Safety Policy. In general the EU will not directly police foreign airlines (although they can if they have specific concerns, and they do carry out random safety checks on airlines at EU airports), but will rely on the airlines home country enforcement, and the results from the ICAO audits to determine if an airline is safe.
The EU also maintains a blacklist of airlines that are not allowed fly into the EU (including into it’s airspace) as they are deemed unsafe, however obviously WOW is not on that list.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
4 Mar, 2024
5 Mar, 2024
5 Mar, 2024