Repetitive exemption

Flexibility provisions - Regulation EU 2018/1139

Background

Regulation (EU) 2018/1139 Article 71 on flexibility provisions:

“Member States may grant exemptions to any natural or legal person subject to this Regulation from the requirements applicable to that person pursuant to Chapter III, other than the essential requirements laid down in that Chapter, or to the delegated or implementing acts adopted on basis of that Chapter in the event of urgent unforeseeable circumstances affecting those persons or urgent operational needs of those persons, where all of the following conditions have been met:……
……Where the exemption referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article was granted for a duration that exceeds eight consecutive months or where a Member State has granted the same exemption repetitively and its total duration exceeds eight months, the Agency shall assess…..”

What is an exemption that becomes repetitive?

The following definition does not constitute an exhaustive list of elements to be considered. The aim of this paper is to cover most of the basic cases. Depending on the circumstances, a case by case approach can still be needed.

1) An exemption can be considered as repetitive only in the context of the relevant MS, meaning that an exemption granted by one MS is not considered as repetitive if another MS has already granted a similar exemption.

2) For the determination of a repetitive exemption, the unique identity of an exemption shall be governed by:

  • the person or organisation it is issued to;
  • the products, persons or organisations exempted;
  • the rule or requirement that is exempted from;
  • the date of issue.

Where an exemption is issued to a person or organisation and the MS/NAA is requested to issue a further exemption to the same person or organisation against the same requirement for the same product, person or organisation, this shall be considered as a repetitive exemption.

This is the case of an extension in time of an existing exemption, or the case of the renewal of an exemption that has already expired. In this case, the “repetitive” exemption is granted against the same requirement, to the same person or organisation for the same product, person or organisation.
As soon as it is extended/renewed it becomes repetitive. 
The reason may be different (the operational need or urgent operational circumstance can evolve).
The safety justifications and mitigating measures can also be different (due to the different timeframe, additional justifications or different measures can be needed). 

So the cumulative duration is the sum of the duration of the initial exemption plus the ones of its extension(s) and/or renewal(s). 

Examples of repetitive exemptions:

A first exemption is delivered to an airline for a non-approved change installed on an aircraft A for 2 months.
Then the second exemption issued to extend the 2 months with 2 additional months for the same aircraft A will be considered as a repetitive exemption and the cumulative duration is 4 months: the second exemption is granted to the same organisation to the same product against the same requirement.

3) The following shall not be considered to be repetitive exemptions:

  • An exemption is issued to a person or organisation against the same requirement, but for a different product(s) or person(s);
  • An exemption is issued to the same person or organisation against a different requirement, but for the same product(s)/person(s);
  • An identical exemption is issued to another person or organisation;
  • An identical exemption issued by another Member State.

Examples of non-repetitive exemptions:

  • A first exemption is delivered to an airline for a non-approved change installed on an aircraft A for 2 months. If 6 months later, a second exemption is issued for the same non-approved modification but on a different aircraft (aircraft B), this exemption should not be considered as a repetitive exemption. The aircraft B can be part of the same airline, be part of another airline (in the same MS or in another MS). The aircraft B may be of the same type or not of the same type as aircraft A.
  • An AD has not been implemented within the given timeframe:
    If an airline X requests for an exemption against Part M.A.301 for aircraft A, and some months after, requests for the same exemption for aircraft B, then the second exemption applicable to the aircraft B should not be considered as repetitive. If an airline Y, in the same MS applies for an exemption against Part M.A.301 concerning the same AD for an aircraft C, this exemption should also not be considered as repetitive.