Finnair, the national airline of Finland is the world's
safest airline, according to Europe's Jet Airliner Crash Data Evaluation
Centre. Finnair is the fifth oldest airline in the world with uninterrupted
existence. It last suffered fatal or hull-loss accidents in 1963.
It ranked Air New Zealand second, followed by Hong
Kong-based Cathay Pacific.
British Airways was the highest ranking UK carrier, making
it into 10th position.
Virgin Atlantic came 15th, easyJet 17th, Thomas Cook
Airlines 18th, Thomson fly 26th and Ryanair 32nd.
JACDEC collects and analyses safety occurrences from
airlines around the world.
The Safety Index ratings are calculated by comparing serious
incidents suffered by airlines over the past 30 years to the revenue passenger
kilometres they have flown over the same period. Airlines are also measured against other international
safety benchmarks.
No US airline made the top 20, Southwest Airlines coming in
highest at No 21.
The Safety Index Top Ten
1 Finnair
2 Air New Zealand
3 Cathay Pacific
4 Emirates
5 Etihad
6 Eva Air
7 Tap Portugal
8 Hainan Airlines
9 Virgin Australia
10 British Airways
Other rankings included Lufthansa (11), ANA (12), Qantas
(13), Jetstar Airways (20), Qatar Airways (22), Air Asia (29), Singapore
Airlines (30), Malaysia Airlines (35), China Southern Airlines (48), South
African Airways (52), Thai Airways International (53), Air India (58) and China
Airlines (60).
Virgin Atlantic's proposed new partner Delta, which is
planning to buy a stake in the UK airline, came 28th.
In total, there were 496 fatalitites on commercial flights
last year, two fewer than in 2011. The number of hull losses (aircraft
write-offs) was 44, one less than the previous year.