
Dubai, United Arab Emirates: Emirates has announced measurable progress in reducing incidents of unexpected severe turbulence across its global operations through a combination of advanced data-sharing, artificial intelligence, and real-time weather intelligence platforms.
The airline said its multi-layered approach developed over the past year has already led to a “significant reduction” in severe turbulence events encountered unexpectedly by its flight crews. The initiatives are designed to enhance passenger comfort and operational safety amid a rise in clear-air turbulence worldwide.
According to the carrier’s media release, Emirates has integrated three core systems into its flight operations ecosystem: SkyPath, Lido mPilot, and IATA’s Turbulence Aware platform.
SkyPath, a predictive turbulence-detection technology, uses sensor and accelerometer data from aircraft systems and even onboard iPads to identify and report turbulence in real time. The system analyses eddy dissipation rate (EDR) data and combines it with ADS-B signals to improve predictive accuracy.
Lido mPilot, developed by Lufthansa Systems, provides Emirates pilots with live graphical overlays of turbulence, weather fronts, and convection zones within their Electronic Flight Bag (EFB) applications. It allows crews to visualise risk areas instantly and adjust routing decisions while airborne.
Meanwhile, Emirates’ participation in the IATA Turbulence Aware programme enables it to contribute to and benefit from a shared, industry-wide database of global turbulence reports. The programme pools anonymised flight data from multiple airlines to create real-time turbulence maps accessible to participating carriers.
“While turbulence can never be entirely eliminated, Emirates’ adoption of these predictive and collaborative systems is aimed at minimising exposure to unexpected severe events,” the airline said in its statement.
The airline said it will continue refining its predictive systems as part of a wider strategy to use artificial intelligence and data analytics in operational decision-making. The next phase involves deeper integration of real-time turbulence data into dispatch planning and automated weather model calibration.
Emirates’ Chief Operations Officer, Adel Al Redha, said the initiative underscores the airline’s commitment to technological innovation and passenger safety. “We are investing in solutions that use the best of science, data, and collaboration to make every flight smoother and safer,” he said.



















