Shipping Lithium Batteries – Updated for 2022

Lithium batteries can be complicated to ship by air. Most people use the IATA Dangerous Goods Regulations but the lithium battery packing instructions in the IATA book are not like most of the other packing instructions.

To make it easier to ship lithium batteries by air, we’ve prepared a video that goes over the special packaging, marks, labels, and documentation commonly required when shipping lithium batteries by air.

There are changes for 2022 – including the elimination of section II options for shipping batteries under packing instruction (PI) 965! Only section IA and section IB remain in PI 965. But there are still section II instructions in other packing instructions (like PI 966 and PI 967 for batteries packed with and in equipment). So the whole process is just that much more complicated.

As always, I will warn you that the video is only a supplement to our hazmat training. There are required training elements that are covered in the class and are not addressed in the video. But our next class will be held April 19-20, 2022 and you can find out more here. [if you don’t see this until after April 19 then feel free to sign up for our next class]

You can watch the video on youtube or just watch here on our site:

Lithium Battery Shippers Video

Brexit Update

Here is a quick run-down of the latest Brexit news:

  • Remember, barring an agreed delay, Brexit is schedule to happen on October 31
  • Parliament was unable to secure a Brexit deal by the recent deadline of October 19
  • As directed by Parliament, Prime Minister Boris Johnson sent a letter to the EU asking for an extension to the October 31 date (the current withdrawal date)
  • Prime Minister Boris Johnson sent a second letter to the EU, saying that he believes a delay would be a mistake
  • EU Council President Donald Tusk is consulting with EU leaders on how to react
  • Boris Johnson has negotiated a deal with the EU, and tried to create a fast track mechanism to get it approved through Parliament before October 31
  • The deal is far from perfect, and includes a few elements that have significant opposition in the UK, including
    • a customs and regulatory border between Northern Ireland and Great Britain
    • The European Court of Justice will continue to have jurisdiction over UK
    • Language on workers rights is vague (many MPs wanted more concrete language)
  • The fast track mechanism for Parliamentary approval of the Withdrawal Agreement Bill was rejected today
  • Under normal timetables, it seems difficult to get the Withdrawal Agreement Bill passed before October 31

ASA will hold a Brexit webinar on October 28 at 11:00 am.  We will discuss the current state of the political solutions, the most likely upcoming scenarios, and how these scenarios will affect aircraft parts transactions.  The webinar will include a look at common parts documentation, and explain how to parse the documentation to identify critical elements that are related to Brexit.  We will focus on US-UK and EU-UK acceptance of aircraft parts (especially those manufactured in, or maintained in, the UK) in an effort to help you comply with the post-Brexit parts acceptance rules.

The registration cut-off date is this October 24, 2019 at 5:00 pm Eastern.  There is no charge for the webinar but attendance is limited to ASA members.  You must be an ASA member to participate in the webinar – if you are not yet an ASA member then you should be!  Please contact Gabriel Maupin at 202-347-6897 if you have any registration questions.

I will be teaching the ASA London Workshop on Wednesday this week – this year’s topics include approved parts standards, documentation, export compliance, import classification, Brexit, and a discussion of some of the new and impending changes in the laws and regulations taht will affect aircraft parts distribution.  After the London Workshop, we’ll have three more ASA workshops in 2019. For complete details please visit our Workshops webpage:

  • Ft Lauderdale, FL – November 19, 2019
  • Chicago, IL – December 3, 2019
  • Dallas, TX – December 5, 2019

 

ASA Workshop in London, with Special Guest Neil Williams of the UK CAA

Need to know the latest changes in the rules that apply to aircraft parts transactions?  Your trade association is here for you!

I will be teaching a regulatory workshop in London later this month (on October 23).  The workshops will deal with the following topics:

  • Aircraft Parts Regulations (European and US)
  • Recent and Prospective Changes in European Law (and how these changes affect the global community
  • Brexit (Neil Williams of the UK CAA plans to join us to discuss the latest developments)
  • International Documentation (and where the norms come from)
  • Compliance with US Import and Export Laws (and how these laws affect international commerce)

As you can see, the broad focus is on compliance standards to help ensure your domestic and international transactions are conducted properly.  As usual, we will focus on some recent and upcoming changes so that the members can plan for those changes and help ensure their business models keep up with the ever-changing world of aircraft parts.

Need to register for the workshop?  You can find workshop details and registration information on ASA’s website.

Can’t make it to London?  No problem!  I am teaching a total of six workshops this Fall:

  • September 20, 2019 – Los Angeles Airport area
  • September 24, 2019 – Singapore Airport area
  • October 23, 2019 – London Heathrow Airport area
  • November 19, 2019 – Ft Lauderdale Airport area
  • December 3, 2019 – Chicago, IL area
  • December 5, 2019 – Dallas, TX area

While I am in London, I will be visiting Aviationweek’s MRO Europe Conference.   If you will be in London and want to meet, then send me (or Katt Brigham) an email and let’s set up a time.  I look forward to seeing you there!

Upcoming ASA Regulatory Workshops Help Aviation Parts Businesses Plan for Industry Changes

Need to know the latest changes in the rules that apply to aircraft parts transactions?  Your trade association is here for you!

I will be teaching regulatory workshops in Los Angeles this week and in Singapore next week.  The workshops are each a little different to reflect the localities, but each workshop will deal with the following topics:

  • Aircraft Parts Regulations (European and US)
  • Recent and Prospective Changes in European Law (and how these changes affect the global community
  • Brexit (how will it affect the rest of the world?)
  • International Documentation (and where the norms come from)
  • Compliance with US Import and Export Laws (and how these laws affect international commerce)

As you can see, the broad focus is on compliance standards to help ensure your domestic and international transactions are conducted properly.  As usual, we will focus on some recent and upcoming changes so that the members can plan for those changes and help ensure their business models keep up with the ever-changing world of aircraft parts.

Need to register for the workshop?  You can find workshop details and registration information on ASA’s website.

Can’t make it to LAX or SIN?  No problem!  I will be teaching a total of six workshops this Fall:

  • September 20, 2019 – Los Angeles Airport area
  • September 24, 2019 – Singapore Airport area
  • October 23, 2019 – London Heathrow Airport area
  • November 19, 2019 – Ft Lauderdale Airport area
  • December 3, 2019 – Chicago, IL area
  • December 5, 2019 – Dallas, TX area

While I am in Singapore, I will be speaking at Aviationweek’s MRO Asia-Pacific Conference.   I will be part of a panel on traceability challenges – and I will be sharing this stage with Jason Reed (President of the Component Solutions Group at GA Telesis) and Brent Webb (President of Aircraft Inventory Management & Services).  If you will be in Singapore, then be sure to catch both events.  I look forward to seeing you there!

Back-to-Birth Traceability is STILL NOT a Legal Requirement

Lately, I have been encountering a number of people who appear to want back-to-birth traceability for articles that traditionally have not required back-to-birth traceability, like expendable articles.  The obvious problem is that when back-to-birth traceability has not been a requirement, it will often not exist for pre-existing articles.  A request for documentation that does not exist, and is not an industry norm, causes frustration for everyone involved.

An installer or other person determining airworthiness needs to have evidence to support that determination.  Evidence!  While back-to-birth traceability is certainly one form of evidence, the form of allowable evidence under current law is much broader than mere “back-to-birth traceability.”

Back-to-birth traceability has been a commercial norm for life-limited parts.  Nonetheless, in 1992, the FAA issued a Chief Counsel’s opinion letter explaining that this commercial norm is NOT an FAA requirement.

Back-to-birth traceability has NOT been a commercial norm for non-life-limited parts, like expendables.  It would be difficult to maintain reliable back-to-birth traceability for non-serialized parts, because of the difficulty in proving that the documents belong to the unserialized articles.

The FAA has repeatedly said that back-to-birth traceability is not an FAA requirement, and that traceability is not an FAA requirement.  The FAA Chief Counsel’s office issued at least three legal opinions between 1992 and 2009 asserting this.  One of the reasons that back-to-birth traceability is not an FAA requirement is because there is no regulation requiring it.  Under the Paperwork Reduction Act, the OMB needs to approve any situation where a person is required to create or maintain records – the OMB will then issue an OB control number to track that activity.  See, e.g., 44 U.S.C. § 3512 (preventing agencies from imposing any penalty for any record-keeping or other information-collection requirement unless the OMB has explicitly approved the requirement and the OMB control number is published with the requirement).  There has never been an OMB control number for back-to-birth traceability.

So if back-to-birth traceability is not a requirement, then what is a requirement?  Typically, our mission as distributors is to preserve evidence to support the ultimate airworthiness decision made by the installer.  The installer has a regulatory need to determine, at the time of installation, that the article will return the product to a condition at least equal to an acceptable/approved configuration (like type certificated configuration or STCed configuration).  E.g. 14 C.F.R. § 43.13(b).  The installer needs to use the right article (so proper identification is important) and needs to know that it is airworthy.  Airworthiness has been described in FAA guidance as (i) the article conforms to its design requirements and (ii) the article is in a condition for safe operation.  E.g. 14 C.F.R. 21.331(a)).  The installer needs evidence to support this conclusion, but the FAA regulations do not limit the forms of evidence that may be used.  FAA Chief Counsel opinions have addressed this and found that one could rely on a variety of different forms of evidence (traceability is just one way to develop the evidence).

Incidentally, when a designee makes a determination about airworthiness of an article the designee uses the same metrics (conforms to design requirements and is in a condition for safe operation).  The designee may then document that finding by issuing an 8130-3. So the same standards that apply to an installer’s determination of airworthiness could also apply to a designee’s determination.

There is a variety of sources of evidence that the industry has traditionally used to support an airworthiness determination. The regulations require Production Approval Holders (PAHs) to assure airworthiness of any articles they release before those articles are released.  Therefore, evidence that the part was released by an FAA PAH is sufficient to show that the part was airworthy at the time of release.  FAA guidance has made it clear that this does not mean back-to-birth traceability – but rather some lesser level of evidence.

FAA AC 20-62E explains, under the heading “PAH’s Documents or Markings,” that “Documents or markings such as shipping tickets and invoices may provide evidence that a part was produced by a manufacturer holding an FAA-approved manufacturing process.”  I have had people ask me about whether one may rely on packaging as evidence that a part came from a PAH. Packaging typically bears the PAH name and/or other marks that reference or represent the PAH. Such marks are protected from misuse under laws like the Lanham Act.  The Lanham Act provides both criminal and civil penalties for counterfeiting or other misuse of a PAH’s name or mark.  Part of the reason that the industry can rely on things like PAH packaging is because the law protects against counterfeiters who might try to spoof that packaging.  For reasons like this, industry generally relies on credible PAH packaging and commercial documentation.

Similarly, I have had people ask “what about counterfeiters who might spoof packaging or paperwork?”  There was famous tale in the 1990s of a counterfeiter who spoofed the Pratt and Whitney logo, but printed the Eagle upside-down.  Ultimately, though, modern technology makes it easy to create bogus paperwork (much easier than creating bogus parts), so insistence on back-to-birth traceability is not a sound strategy for counterfeit avoidance.  Packaging is a little harder to spoof, so it is potentially slightly more reliable than documentation.  But ultimately, we need to rely on our system of laws and industry norms to protect us.  Just as we do not assume everyone on the street is going to murder us, we also cannot assume that every article we receive is counterfeit.  Instead we rely on the convention that packaging and paperwork will be genuine,and that it is safe to rely on them; and then we apply counterfeit avoidance mechanisms to support that convention.  So that is part of why we rely on normal packaging and paperwork  as evidence that the part came from a PAH and was airworthy at the time of release.

Don’t forget that evidence of PAH sourcing – alone – may not be enough to install an article.  Articles can suffer damage or degradation, so the second half of the airworthiness analysis (“in a condition for safe operation”) also applies.  If we know that the article was airworthy in the past, and is unused, then the installer merely needs to assess whether the article has suffered damage or degradation since that release.

Designees and installers have historically relied on things like PAH packaging, PAH shipping tickets, PAH packing lists, etc. as evidence of sourcing from PAHs during their inspections.  The receiving inspection AC (FAA AC 20-154) explains that inspection is “[t]he act of testing or checking a product or part thereof against established standards to assure it conforms to its design requirements and is in a condition for safe operation.”  Note that the goal in that sentence is to assure that the article “conforms to its design requirements and is in a condition for safe operation” – these are the traditional elements of airworthiness.  This section goes on to explain that “Inspection could include documentation review, visual inspections, bench or functional tests, preservation (condition), packaging, technical data, or shelf life limits are a few examples to consider.”  So the FAA has explicitly recognized that checking documents and packaging is a part of the airworthiness check.

It is important to remember that industry’s obligation is to have sufficient evidence to support airworthiness decisions – not to have a ‘magic document’ nor back-to-birth traceability.  Documents from credible sources (like airline commercial documentation asserting identity and condition of the article) can be used as evidence of PAH sourcing, or of other important facts.

ASA and ACPC Partner to Offer Classes on Changes in the Global Parts Paradigms; NEXT WEEK!

ASA will be at the Air Carrier Purchasing Conference (ACPC) in Washington, DC this weekend and next week. Look for us all weekend long, but we hope to see you all on Monday during our FREE classes!.

On Monday, August 12, 2019, Jason Dickstein will teach three professional development classes at ACPC that will be useful for the aircraft parts community. The first, in the morning, will focus on what we expect out of Brexit, and how it will impact global aircraft parts transactions. The second, after lunch, will discuss import law – as the US imposes new tariffs on imported aircraft parts, it is important to understand your compliance obligations as well as the duties you need to pay on the imported parts. Finally, the third session will look at a number of parts issues documentation issues, including both recent and impending regulations that are changing the parts transactional paradigms.

Read on for expanded descriptions, below!


Monday 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM

Doing Business in the Post-Brexit World

Brexit is almost upon us…. Maybe. We will discuss what factors to watch as the world approaches the current Brexit deadline, what the aircraft parts community should anticipate under several different Brexit possibilities, what aviation negotiations are going on behind-the-scenes and how to protect yourself from the worst-case scenarios.


Monday 2:00 PM – 3:00 PM

Import Law for Aviation Professionals: From Harmonized Tariffs to Country of Origin

Most aircraft parts are usually imported “duty-free” and this can give us a distorted view of import law; a view that is upset when you receive ab unexpected bill for import duties. With existing China tariffs and proposed tariffs on Airbus parts, many aircraft parts importers are facing unwanted surprises in the form of import duties. We will examine the process for importing, how to classify your imports, and how to identify the tariff and related import duties for your import.

If you import parts, then tariff duties can have a direct impact on your bottom line – this session will help you to avoid surprises.


Monday 3:15 PM – 4:15 PM

How Do International Agreements (like the MAG) Affect Aircraft Parts Transactions?

The rules for aircraft parts transactions are changing! This session will begin with an examination of the relationships between international agreements and acceptance of traceability documents, but it will also address recent and impending rule and policy changes that could significantly affect the documentation requirements for aircraft parts transactions. If you have questions about documentation and international transactions, then this is the place for answers.


All sessions will be held in the Maryland Suites in the Marriott Wardman Park Hotel on Monday, August 12, 2019.

The Electronic Records/Signature Law (ESIGN) turns 18

The Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act (ESIGN) was signed into law on June 30, 2000.  That makes the law 18 years old on Sunday.  If there was any justice in the world, we’d all be buying the law a cigar and allowing it to vote.

ESIGN established a general rule of validity for electronic records, electronic contracts, and electronic signatures.  Prior to the law, many courts had refused to recognize electronic signatures and they questioned electronic records.

ESIGN applies to transactions “in interstate commerce,” which is a term of art meaning that the transaction is open to being regulated by Congress under the Interstate Commerce Clause of the Constitution (most transactions, today, are subject to the Interstate Commerce Clause of the Constitution).  Generally, it explains that when records and agreements are required to be in writing, an electronic version of them counts as a “writing.”

ESIGN also applies to federal and state government agencies.  They are forbidden from adopting record-keeping rules that would “impose unreasonable costs on the acceptance and use of electronic records.”  The law explains that if an agency wants to require paper records (to the exclusion of electronic), then the agency needs to show “there is a compelling governmental interest relating to law enforcement or national security for imposing such requirement.”

Eighteen years after the law was enacted, the aviation industry still struggles with full implementation of the law.  Even though it is clear that aviation records can be recorded and transmitted electronically, the aviation industry remains wedded to paper.  Nowhere is this more clear than with respect to parts documentation.  While distributors are now more comfortable reducing paper 8130-3 tags, and paper material certifications to electronic format for archival storage, transactional records remains stubbornly rooted to a paper paradigm.

One reason for this paper paradigm is because most aircraft parts are unserialized, and therefore it can be difficult to uniquely tie an electronic record to a particular (unserialized) part. A paper record, on the other hand, can be literally, physically, connected to the part to which it applies.  In a world in which we deal with so many different parts coming and going through our warehouses, paper records provide a level of comfort that we are connecting the uniquely correct record to the uniquely correct part.

The FAA has repeatedly said  that commercial documentation paradigms (like back-to-birth traceability) are not required by FAA regulations.  They have specifically stated that there is no Federal Aviation regulation that requires traceability of an aircraft part to its origin, and the FAA does not require back-to-birth records even for life-limited parts.  The FAA has explained that a part may be identified as having been released by a manufacturer as an airworthy part using  “a shipping document, a manufacturer’s certificate of conformance or material certification, or an FAA Airworthiness Approval Tag, Form 8130-3,”  but that in the absence of such documentation, “the part may be submitted for inspection and testing to determine conformity.”

Despite the best efforts of the FAA’s lawyers, the industry remains stubbornly rooted to a paperwork paradigm.  There are many commercial reasons for this, but one important pseudo-regulatory reason is that FAA inspectors frequently insist that the manuals for FAA certificate holders feature documentation requirements.  Once these requirements are published in the manuals, then these FAA-approved manuals drive the documentation requirements which are flowed-down throughout the industry.  And because these documentation requirements are not directly tied to FAA regulations, there is no opportunity to apply the ESIGN mandates and protections to them.

Through recent conversations with both the FAA and EASA, we are starting to see a new understanding of the value of several important paperwork paradigms:

  • limiting documentation ‘requirements’ only to those that are actually valuable to safety;
  • making acceptable safety information more readily available through available (and trusted) industry channels; and
  • permitting greater reliance on electronic information where availability of such data supports safety.

This is likely to be related to the greater reliance of the rest of the world on electronic data (a reliance that was facilitated by ESIGN), but it is also related to the fact that senior decision-makers in the FAA and EASA are more comfortable with electronic records than were their predecessors (again, a comfort that was facilitated by the impact of ESIGN on other parts of the world of data).  And they are also thinking more critically about what information supports safety (and should be encouraged) and what information does not support safety (and therefore becomes unnecessary to the FAA’s mission).

FUNCTION CODE 56 UPDATE: Airline Sourcing is OK; but PAH Trace Must be Established

Recent confusion about the use of function code 56 has caused some consternation in the industry.  The focus of this issue has been on parts obtained from air carriers (which represents a significant portion of the industry’s surplus parts).

The issue arose from an FAA email that incorrectly stated that articles obtained from an air carrier were ineligible for 8130-3.  This was not a correct statement, and the FAA is planning to issue a follow-up email to correct this statement.

Our FAA contacts says that they have seen at least one case where Limited DAR-F’s are issuing 8130-3 tags for parts that were not traceable to a PAH in accordance with the criteria FAA established in the DAR 56 policy memo of October 14, 2016.  The FAA reports that a function code 56 designee had issued tags based solely on paperwork from an airline, in the absence of paperwork or markings from the PAH. While some DAR function codes permit reliance on air carrier evidence (e.g. to identify new surplus parts), function code 56 does not permit that to be the sole basis of an airworthiness decision.

Recently the FAA sent an email to the entire Limited DAR-F community to warn them about this issue.  The intent of the email was to make it clear that the paperwork or the physical part markings had to be traceable to a PAH in order to issue an 8130-3 tag under DAR function code 56.

The recent emailed guidance suggested that function code 56 does not allow 8130-3 tags for articles from Part 121 air carriers.  This description was not an accurate portrayal of FAA policy, because the statement was truncated.  We have discussed this matter with Scott Geddie, who heads up designee policy for the FAA, and he confirmed that the correct statement should have looked like this:

This program DOES NOT allow issuance of an 8130-3 tag for:

….

  • Parts or articles obtained from an FAA Part 121 air carrier, unless proper documentation exists from the PAH or there are part markings traceable to the PAH

The italicized text (above) was not in the original FAA email, but the FAA has pledged to send a follow-up email with the italicized text, and has confirmed that italicized text represents the intent of the FAA.

For comparison purposes, the original October 14, 2016 policy memo makes the function code 56 requirements very clear.  To issue an 8130-3 under function code 56, you need one of the following:

  1. Certificate of Conformity/Statement of Conformity from a Production Approval Holder (PAH); or
  2. Certificate of Conformity/Statement of Conformity or shipping document from a PAH supplier with verification of direct ship authorization; or
  3. Part Markings made under 14 C.F.R. § 45.15.

If you have other evidence of airworthiness (like valid air carrier trace), then an 8130-3 may still be issued – but it must be issued by a DAR with a different function code.

ASA to Announce 2014 Workshop Schedule

ASA will soon be announcing the 2014 Workshop schedule.  The workshops change every year, but they are generally focused on identifying the regulations and policies that aircraft parts distributor need to know in order to remain successful n the industry.  In the past, we have addressed topics like:

  • AC 00-56/ASA-100
  • aircraft parts documentation topics (like the 8130-3 tag)
  • approved and unapproved parts
  • counterfeit parts identification
  • distinguishing Commerce-Department-controlled parts from ITAR-controlled parts
  • export out of the United States (BIS, DDTC and OFAC regulations)
  • FAA regulations that affect parts transactions
  • EASA regulations that affect parts transactions
  • hazmat identification in aircraft parts
  • import into the United States
  • liens and other security interests
  • “magic words” for quotes and purchase orders
  • quality assurance
  • safety management systems
  • standard parts and commercial parts
  • using commercial documents to protect your right to get paid

We are just beginning to draft the 2014 workshop.  This is your opportunity to influence the syllabus and make sure we are teaching the subjects that you want to hear about.  Send me a note if you would like to suggest a topic for the 2014 workshop.

ASA’s workshops are subsidized by the Association so the registration fees are very inexpensive. This is an excellent opportunity to introduce new employees to new concepts that they need to understand and for more seasoned employees to ask questions and get answers about the details of compliance and aviation distribution business.  We particularly recommend the class for quality, shipping/receiving and sales people.  We love hearing from sales people that a better understanding of the regulations and policies helped them cement a sale that was falling apart, or helped prevent them from making a mistake on the details of a sale.

Will we be in your city?  This year, ASA is planning to hold workshops in Atlanta, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Seattle and South Florida.  More cities may be announced later.  If we are not in your city, then we would love to see you in a neighboring city!

Dates are not yet set, as we attempt to firm things up with local hotels, but we hope to announced a more formal schedule very soon.

ASA Files Repair Station Comments to Protect Members

ASA has filed comments in response to the FAA Notice of Proposed Rulemaking concerning repair stations and their ratings.  Although the ratings proposal was the centerpiece of this proposed rule, many of the proposals that caused the most concern were those unrelated to the ratings element of the proposal.

This is a proposed rule that could have a significant effect on the ASA Community.  Some of the regulatory proposals, for example, could interfere with documentation and traceability norms.

Issues addressed by the wide-ranging comments from ASA included:
<ul>
<li>Recertification</li>
<li>Certificate Surrender</li>
<li>Asset Sale</li>
<li>Ratings</li>
<li>Capabilities Lists in the Operations Specifications</li>
<li>Removing Operations Specifications from the Certificate</li>
<li>Capabilities Lists</li>
<li>Quality Systems</li>
<li>Appropriate Equipment and Tools</li>
<li>Permanent Blacklisting From the Industry under § 1051(e)</li>
<li>Entitlement to Certificate under § 1053(a)</li>
<li>Change to Part 43 Appendix B</li>
</ul>
A complete set of the ASA Comments will soon be posted to the <a title=”ASA Website” href=”http://www.aviationsuppliers.org&#8221; target=”_blank”>ASA website</a>.