To get your aviation career flying, simply send us an email and we will contact you within 24 hours.
SlipStream Aviation Consulting was established in November 2001, originally trading as AIATA, to assist in the establishment, administration, approvals, marketing and future progression of pilot training and general aviation organisations throughout the pacific rim
Slipstream Aviation Consulting was established in November 2001 to provide course promotion, student recruitment and welfare services for CRICOS registered course providers around Australia and professional pilot training academies overseas. We soon developed an exceptional reputation through our delivery of these services to selected flying schools, TAFE colleges and Universities. This became the stable platform upon which other proposed services were developed and introduced.
In 2009 SlipStream launched a range of new products to encompass full aviation business consulting and compliance services to assist the industry with maintaining their competitive advantage in this dynamic industry landscape. We have a real understanding of the environment in which our clients operate and are ideally placed to provide solutions in the establishment, administration, approvals, student recruitment, marketing and future progression of existing or emerging pilot training organisations throughout the Pacific Rim.
Through its continued growth SlipStream Aviation Consulting now incorporates a dedicated management team of aviation industry professionals with many years of experience, to deliver a broad portfolio of services and solutions efficiently and cost effectively.
Our commitments are:
The long awaited Senate enquiry into pilot training and airline safety has recommended that an ATPL should be the minimum licence standard for copilots on "high capacity" RPT jet airliners such as the Boeing 737 and Airbus A320.
Boeing warns airlines time's running out for training
Airlines are seeing greater numbers of their pilots being poached by competing carriers, a sure sign that the long-expected pilot shortage is kicking in despite continued economic gloom in the US and Europe.
The comments from Boeing Flight Services vice-president Sherry Carbary came at the release the 2011 version of Boeing's annually updated analysis of the airline industry's growing needs for skilled personnel such as pilots and technicians over the next 20 years. In 2010 Boeing's study predicted a need for 446,500 new pilots over the next 20 years, but now Carbary says that has risen to 459,600. Boeing's prediction for the number of fully trained technicians airlines will need has climbed from 596,500 to 650,000.
The average annual training need to meet that demand is 23,000 new pilots and 32,000 new technicians
A new report compiled by the CSIRO and a host of airline and industry groups has deemed 'bio-derived' fuel "economically and environmentally" sustainable, with a number of benefits tipped for both Australian and New Zealand.
The Flight Path to Sustainable Aviation (FPSA) report aims to set out a clear pathway for establishing a bio-fuel industry in the region, with several flow-on effects to be seen over the next 20 years. Included are cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 17 per cent, generating more than 12,000 jobs and reducing Australia's reliance on fuel imports by $2 billion per annum.
To get your aviation career flying, simply send us an email and we will contact you within 24 hours.
SlipStream delivers the personal attention and local market knowledge you want, backed by a leading national and international network of expertise, knowledge and advice that you need to succeed.