Education and Skills

Aviation industry urged to hire more women as staff shortages loom

Ethiopian Airlines' first female captain Amsale Gualu prepares for takeoff at Bole international airport in the capital Addis Ababa, November 19, 2015. Ethiopia Airlines on Thursday, dispatched its first ever all-female operated flight. Every aspect of the journey was handled by women, from the ground crew, aircraft maintenance to traffic controllers. Gualu and her co-pilot were charged with flying the crew and passengers to Bangkok, Thailand. REUTERS/Tiksa Negeri TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

Only 3 to 4% of pilots globally are women. Image: REUTERS/Tiksa Negeri TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

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Executives from top aerospace and aviation companies called on Thursday for stepped-up efforts to attract more women, saying this could help solve looming shortages of pilots, mechanics and top managers in the traditionally male-dominated sector.

The industries are coming under scrutiny because of the low numbers of women employed as senior executives or airline pilots. At the same time, a growing shortage of pilots is putting the sector's recent growth at risk.

The head of Qatar Airways, Akbar Al Baker, caused a storm last month when he said that a woman could not do his job, although he later apologised, saying his comments had been intended as a joke and were taken out of context.

Charlotte Pedersen, chief executive of Luxaviation Helicopters, a private aviation operator, said urgent action was needed since the sector faced a potential "huge gap" in management capacity in a decade as current executives retired.

"We can't just recruit from half the population," Pedersen, the first female pilot in the Danish air force, told a panel discussion at the Farnborough Airshow.

Marnie Munn, an airline captain with easyJet, told the conference that only three to four percent of pilots globally were women.

Jane Basson, chief of staff to Airbus CEO Tom Enders, said women now accounted for 17.5 percent of the company's workforce of 140,000 but that was just a tick up from 15 percent in 2005.

"It's not progressing fast enough," she said, adding that her company was now using data analysis tools to understand why it was proving so difficult to recruit and retain women.

In addition, she said Airbus was using tools such as smart phone applications to provide encouragement and support to workers, but could tailor those to reach women specifically.

Hundreds of industry executives attended the panel, with many signing a UK charter that commits organisations to support promotion of women to senior roles, set their own targets and report on their progress to boost accountability.

More than 50 aviation and aerospace companies with operations in Britain have signed the charter, and the number is growing, said Katherine Bennett, a senior vice president with Airbus. It is modeled on a similar pledge in the finance sector.

Signatories also agree to have a senior executive oversee diversity efforts, and to link pay of senior executives to meeting internal targets on gender diversity and inclusion.

Budget airline easyJet has a target that 20 percent of its new pilots should be female by 2020 and British Aviation Minister Liz Sugg said other firms were taking similar steps.

But more work was needed to close pay gaps that often exceeded 50 percent in the aerospace sector, add women to corporate boards and recruit more female pilots, she said, noting that women make up just 5 percent of pilots at UK-registered airlines.

"We really do have a long way to go before these barriers disappear altogether. There are fundamental gender issues in aviation and aerospace," Sugg said.

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