The "Guideline for submitting exemption regulations for air operator " is for informational purposes only and does not guarantee the CAAT will grant your required exemption. The CAAT will evaluate your exemption and send you its decision based on a full review of your request. The CAAT grant or denial of exemption is based on the specifics of each situation.
An exemption is a request to the CAAT to provide relief from any specified requirement in the Air Navigation Regulations and the CAAT Standards Documents.
Reference to section 15/14 of the Air Navigation Act B.E. 2497 as amended by the Air Navigation Act (No.14) B.E. 2562 provides the power to the Director-General to exempt in the public interest and does not affect air navigation safety, by notification through at least in CAAT Website or in any CAAT Information Network, any person, aircraft, aeronautical product, aerodrome, or aviation related service from any specified requirement in any regulations order, notice, circular, directive, guideline or requirement, issued under this Act in either wholly or partially, subject to such conditions, if any, as may be specified in such notification.
Execution for the exemption under the ANA, Section 15/14, must have one of the following reasons appear to the Director prior to such exclusion. In each individual case, the Director must be satisfied that:
(1) The requirement has been substantially complied with and further compliance is unnecessary;
(2) The action taken or provision made in respect of the matter to which the requirement relates is as effective or more effective than actual compliance with the requirement;
(3) The prescribed requirements are clearly unreasonable or inappropriate in the particular case; or
(4) Events have occurred that make the prescribed requirements unnecessary or inappropriate in the particular case, and the risk to safety will not be significantly increased by the granting of the exemption.
Before granting an exemption, CAAT will consider whether an applicant’s proposal provides a level of safety, or risk control, equivalent to that required by the existing regulation or standard. Aviation is a dynamic environment and individual circumstances vary, therefore the granting of a similar exemption in the past is not justification for the granting of another exemption. Each exemption will be assessed on its own merits, with reference to the most up-to-date information.
The obligation is on the applicant to provide a risk and evidence-based justification as to why the Director-General should grant an exemption. To be able to successfully assess an application, the CAAT requires documentation and supporting evidence to clearly support the reasons for the exemption request, including any proposed actions or conditions to maintain an appropriate level of safety.
The request for Exemptions shall be accompanied by safety and risk assessments. This will allow the CAAT to view proposals in context and should reduce the time spent analyzing any associated risks. Failure to provide adequate information will result in a delay in the processing of the application while the CAAT seeks the information necessary for it to consider the application.
When seeking an exemption, the applicant should provide at least the following information: –
In order to grant an Exemption, the CAAT will need to be satisfied in all cases that the risk to safety will not be significantly increased by the granting of the exemption. Applicants need to demonstrate that the risk to safety will not be significantly increased by the granting of the Exemption. This is to provide assurance that all risks have been identified and mitigations are in place to ensure that risk to safety is kept as low as reasonably practicable.
The details of the exemption application form contain the applicants:-
The details and substance of the Request for Exemption: –
(a) The application for exemption shall clearly state-
As appropriate which may deem fit, along with the means of mitigation and indication as to when compliance can be expected.
(b) Applications must contain the following:
(c) The action plan for rectification and review of the temporary exemption, including the mitigation measures adopted for ensuring safety during the exemption period.
(d) If a permanent exemption is sought, the applicant has to indicate the mitigation measures adopted to reduce the risk arising due to non-compliance after carrying out a safety assessment.
(e) Undertaking by the person/ organization that he shall annually review the conditions or mitigation measures and any other resultant non-compliance in particular when any significant changes in the activity are proposed.
(f) The applicant should provide adequate information in the prescribed proforma for consideration for granting exemptions with supporting documents. Failure to provide adequate information may delay the processing/ refusal of the application.
(g) If the applicant seeks emergency processing, the application must contain supporting facts and reasons that the application was not timely filed, and the reasons it is an emergency. The Authority may deny an application if the Authority finds that the applicant has not justified the failure to apply in a timely fashion.
The role of the exemption internal CAAT assessment team is to assess the documentation and supporting evidence supplied, with input from subject matter experts, and provide an evidence-based recommendation for the Director's consideration. Therefore, the information and evidence supplied will directly affect the recommendation put forward to the Director. The exemption process may require a CAAT technical, policy, and legal review before it is presented to the Director. Additionally, applications are prioritized alongside all other applications received. Therefore, applicants should allow adequate time for their application to be processed.
An exemption goes through internal assessment by the internal CAAT assessment team before it is presented to the Director. This assessment process takes time; therefore, an applicant should submit an exemption request at least 90 days in advance. This will ensure the exemption decision is received before the date it is required and provides adequate time for the applicant to implement a fallback strategy if the exemption is declined. There should be no expectation that a short-notice request will receive urgent or priority attention, particularly if the applicant has known about the situation for some time.
Currently, there is no charge associated with the processing of an exemption request.
The applicant can download the related notification exemption, guidance material for the exemption policy and procedure manual, and the exemption application form and find the related Air Operator Regulations via the provided information below:
The applicant shall submit the signed exemption application, including the evidence as mentioned in Item 4 above, to the Director-General of The Civil Aviation Authority of Thailand at the following address:
Flight Operations Standards Department (OPS), The Civil Aviation Authority of Thailand
222 Soi Vibhavadi Rangsit 28, Vibhavadi Rangsit Road, Chatuchak, Chatuchak, Bangkok, Thailand 10900
TEL: 02-568-8800 ext.8843 Mobile: 063-205-8843 Email: [email protected]