By Chinelo Obogo
The Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) has taken a step toward modernizing its regulatory framework, as it unveiled the EMPIC Personnel Licencing and Medical Certification digital platform at a stakeholder engagement session in Lagos this week.
The Director General of the NCAA, Capt. Chris Najomo called on airlines, training organizations, medical centres, and license holders to embrace the transformation, describing it as a critical shift from paper-driven processes to a data-driven, audit-compliant system designed to meet global aviation standards.
The DG said the stakeholder engagement is designed to further ensure industry-wide alignment, readiness, and shared ownership of the EMPIC PEL | MED digital transformation initiative.
He said it provides a platform to clearly communicate the objectives, scope, and operational impact of the new system, while preparing the airlines, training organisations, AAMEs, medical centres, and license holders for the Go-Live.
Ultimately, he said, it transforms the initiative from an internal NCAA project into a collective industry advancement.
Najomo said that why this transformation matters is because civil aviation regulation is built on safety, security, integrity and operability. In a modern aviation ecosystem, he said these pillars must be supported by robust digital infrastructure.
“Manual and semi-automated processes and validation, fragmented databases, paper-driven workflows, fragmented databases and limited traceability no longer meet the demands of ICAO SARPs compliance, real-time verification requirements, global mobility of license holders, data integrity and audit traceability, increased industry volume and complexity.
“As traffic grows, the aviation workforce expands, and global scrutiny intensifies, regulatory systems must evolve accordingly and operate at the speed and intelligence of the industry they oversee. The deployment of the EMPIC Licensing and Medical Certification platform is the first phase in our response to this reality, and it represents our deliberate shift toward a data driven, intelligent, audit-compliant licencing and medical certification ecosystem; one that enhances integrity, transparency, and global credibility. Licencing and medical certification are not administrative functions; they are safety controls.
“Our digital transformation is in two broad categories; Persons and Organizations. This Go-Live stakeholder engagement is focused on aviation licensed personnel (PEL) however it is important to state here that our next phases of implementation in our digital transformation journey will be focused on.
”The Organization Approval Surveillance comprises of the following:- Air Operator Certification (AOC), Approved Training Organisations (ATO), Approved Maintenance Organisations (AMO), Continuing Airworthiness Management Organisations (CAMO), aerodromes, air navigation service providers, meteorology, ground handling organisations, dangerous goods approval and oversight, operational Specifications (Ops Specs) Management; and ramp inspections and surveillance audits, technical certification, on the other hand, includes aircraft type certification validation, supplemental type Certificates (STC) Approval/Validation, aircraft registration, airworthiness certification, export / import certificate of airworthiness, airworthiness directives adoption and monitoring, major modifications and repairs approval, aircraft maintenance programme approval; and minimum equipment list approval,” he said.
Najomo said this transformation delivers measurable benefits to the aviation community including the regulator. For license holders, online transparent application process for initial, renewal, and conversion, etc; Real-time status visibility, reduced turnaround times, secure biometric-backed credentials, QR-code-based license verification, improved data accuracy and improved global portability of credentials.
”For AAMEs and Medical Centres it is clear integration with aviation medical services, structured submission and appointment workflows, secure digital transmission of medical outcomes to AMS, and a reduced administrative burden.
“For airlines and operators, it is real-time license verification capability; Improved compliance assurance; Reduced operational risk from invalid credentials and for NCAA, it means enhanced oversight capability, centralized data and process integrity, improved audit readiness, improved analytics and workforce planning visibility and measurable regulatory accountability. This is not technology for its own sake. It is technology in service of safety and compliance with measurable impact.
”Its success requires the collaboration of all stakeholders, in the sense that: applicants must ensure data accuracy, AAMEs must comply with digital submission protocols, Operators must adopt verification processes, inspectors must maintain system discipline and NCAA departments must align with workflow governance,” he said.
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