156 crashes, but 'good year' for aviation safety

The number of air crashes around the world in 2006 was the lowest in 53 years, making it one of the safest in aviation history, an independent watchdog said in Switzerland today.

156 crashes, but 'good year' for aviation safety

The number of air crashes around the world in 2006 was the lowest in 53 years, making it one of the safest in aviation history, an independent watchdog said in Switzerland today.

Last year saw 156 crashes, compared with 178 in 2005, the Aircraft Crashes Record Office (ACRO) said in a statement.

The Geneva-based organisation said 1,292 people died in plane crashes in 2006, a drop of 11% on the previous year.

According to the International Civil Aviation Organisation, air travel increased by 4% in 2006 to about 2.1 billion passengers.

Almost a third of all crashes last year occurred in North America, with 45 accidents in the United States alone, ACRO said.

The deadliest accident was the downing of a Tupolev TU-154 in Ukraine in August, in which 170 people lost their lives.

While the largest number of fatalities usually occurs when a large, jet-powered plane crashes, three quarters of accidents last year involved smaller, propeller-powered planes.

Two European-made Airbus planes crashed in 2006, compared with five made by Seattle-based Boeing and 16 Ukrainian Antonov aircraft.

ACRO records all aviation accidents in which planes capable of carrying at least six passengers in addition to the crew are damaged beyond repair.

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