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General requirements to be met by a CAMO are facilities (offices and documentation storage), a Continuing Airworthiness Management Exposition (CAME) which must be approved by the competent authority of the country or EASA and company procedures (to comply with Part M requirements). A CAMO can also be the operator of the aircraft.
EASA also sets policy for aeronautical repair stations (Part 145 organisations in Europe and the US, also known as Part 571 organisations in Canada) and issues repair station certificates for repair stations located outside the EU, which permit foreign repair stations to perform work that is acceptable to the EU on its aircraft).
The European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) was created in 2003 and reached full functionality in 2008, and has since taken over most of the JAA functions. JAA Certification Specifications, formerly known as JARs, are recognised by EASA as an acceptable basis for showing compliance with their national airworthiness codes.
AirX partners with a local operator in the United States who manages two Citation X’s. The Head Office is located in Malta, with other offices in London, U.K. AirX Jet Support is based in Stansted Airport and Malta [3] and has two EASA Part-145 Certificate of Maintenance [4] issued by EASA and maintains both the AirX fleet and third party ...
Airest (Airest Inc) is an Estonian private aviation company engaged in commercial cargo air transportation in accordance with EU-OPS Part 1. With the head office in Tallinn, Airest provides service to cargo partners in Northern Europe. In early 2012, Estonian Civil Aviation Administration issued a new Air Operator Certificate to Airest Inc.
Similar standards are maintained by other aviation authorities. For example European Technical Standard Orders (ETSO) by EASA for the European Union, [3] with limited reciprocal equivalence on a per-country basis. [4] These often have the same numbers as FAA TSOs. For example, the FAA TSO for aviation headsets is C139.
c:"Import aircraft.") of this section is entitled to a standard airworthiness certificate if -- (1) He presents evidence to the Administrator that the aircraft conforms to a type design approved under a type certificate or a supplemental type certificate and to applicable Airworthiness Directives; (2) The aircraft (except an experimentally ...
EU: EASA – 145 Certified Repair Station No. EASA.145.4380; Argentina: DNA – 145 Approved Maintenance Organization No. 1-B-318; Bermuda: BDCA – Approved Maintenance Organization No. BDA/AMO/187; Brazil: ANAC – 145 Approved Maintenance Organization 0604-04/ANAC; Canada: TCCA/FAA – 145 Approved Maintenance Organization No. DALR026A