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TECHNICAL & SAFETY COMMITTEE

TECHNICAL & SAFETY COMMITTEE. International Parachuting Commission FAI. 2006 Safety Report. 39 countries supplied data 5,958,194 skydives were made by 832,683 jumpers 51 people were killed skydiving (these figures include Tandems) 1 Fatality per 116,827 jumps

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TECHNICAL & SAFETY COMMITTEE

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  1. TECHNICAL & SAFETY COMMITTEE International Parachuting Commission FAI

  2. 2006 Safety Report 39 countries supplied data 5,958,194 skydives were made by 832,683 jumpers 51 people were killed skydiving (these figures include Tandems) 1 Fatality per 116,827 jumps 16,327 jumpers

  3. 51 Fatalities • 11 Students (22%) 0-25 Freefalls • 9 Intermed. (18%) 26-250 Freefalls • 31 Experts (60%) 251 + Freefalls Total 51 • Cutaway & Low/No reserve pull 5 • No pull/low pull on main 9 • Others 37 Total 51

  4. ‘Other’ Fatalities (37) • Fast Canopies 16 • Landing Errors 5 • Equipment Problems 5 • Collision under open canopies 2 • Tandem fatalities 2 • Freefall collision 1 • Cutaway and bag-lock on reserve 1 • Malfunction of deploy. device, no reserve action 1 • Landing under two canopies 1 • Rotation under canopy until impact 1 • Collision on opening (CF jump) 1 • Medical problem & impact with building 1 Total 37

  5. Fatalities – Largest Groups • 1 31% (16) Fast Canopies • 2 18% ( 9) No or Low Main Activation • 3 10% each ( 5 each) Other Landing Errors and Equipment Problems

  6. Some Significant Figures • 37 of the 51 fatalities (73%) occurred with the parachutist having at least one good parachute on his/her back • 21 of the 51 fatalities (41%) occurred after the successful deployment of the main parachute • 10 of the 51 fatalities (20%) might have been avoided by AAD use • 41 of the 51 fatalities (80%) appear to have been caused by human error 5 of the 51 Fatalities were First Jump Students 2 of the 51 Fatalities were Tandem, Instructor & Student

  7. Some Trends & Issues • High numbers of fatalities resulting from landing and handling canopies – a continuing issue. • Increased use of AAD shows in relatively low figure for number of jumpers who might have been saved by the use of an AAD • No/low pull on main, cutaway and no/low reserve pull accounted for 27% of fatalities in 2006 – AAD may have reduced this number

  8. Tandem - Solo • Tandems 12.2% against all Solo jumps in 2006 – 10.4% in 2005 5,311,515 Solo jumps – 646,679 Tandems • Tandems ratio to other types of First Jump – To Static Line and IAD/JAD 10 : 1 To AFF 13 : 1 To S/L, IAD/JAD, AFF combined 6 : 1 Tandem Fatalities 2 (4%) Solo Fatalities 49 (96%)

  9. Distribution of Reports DISTRIBUTION OF REPORTS This report, along with 2006 AAD Report, and Power Point presentations for both reports, has been sent by e-mail to all respondents and to all other countries for which we have e-mail addresses. CDs are available to IPC Delegates and to those who request copies. The CD has the following - 2006 Safety Survey Report 2006 Safety Survey Report Power Point Presentation 2006 AAD Report 2006 AAD Report Power Point Presentation Protective Headwear Survey Safety Bulletins (2) issued in 2007 by T & S Committee Safety Survey 2007 Form Safety Survey 2007 Notes AAD Survey 2007 Form APPEAL Those countries who did not report for 2006 are earnestly requested to make a special effort to do so for 2007. The compilation of data is to the benefit of the country gathering same, not just to IPC and the worldwide skydiving community.

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