Qantas has not had a fatality since 1951 and they are not even on that list. Neither is Lufthansa who lost 2 pax in '93 and their last fatal before that was I think in '79. SWA has not ever had a fatal have they? And BA has a fatality rate identical to that of DAL (0.17 fatalities per million miles traveled) and yet they are #10? DAL is not on the list either. Virgin Australia is what, like 12 years old now? Does the data include Virgin Blue days? (which was not flawless)
ATRA ranked the safest airlines in the world in 2012 (alphabetical order) as:
- Air France - KLM
- AMR Corporation (American Airlines, American Eagle)
- British Airways
- Continental Airlines
- Delta Airlines
- Japan Airlines
- Lufthansa
- Southwest Airlines
- United Airlines
- US Airways
It would be interesting to know the criteria/data used for the rankings for each carrier such as incidents, (what types) actual fatalities and dates, how many incidents were aircraft issues and which were pilot issues, number of aircraft in the fleets, miles flown, number of flights and distances, number of pax carried, maintenance programs and records, age of fleets, training programs, etc. Isn't all of that detailed data that matters in relation to determining "safe" carriers?