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FAA updates list of cold temperature airports, renames program

The FAA on August 12 released an updated list of cold temperature airports at which pilots must apply altitude corrections on certain segments of instrument approaches when outside air temperature drops below a published limitation. At the same time, the agency renamed the program from cold temperature restricted airports to cold temperature airports.

Lake Tahoe Airport. Photo by Mike Fizer.

Cold temperature airport procedures are detailed in Chapter 7, Section 3 of the Aeronautical Information Manual, and the airports are also published on the FAA’s website. Airports in 31 states are included, along with the associated temperature restriction, and which part of affected approaches requires an altitude correction—the intermediate, final, or missed approach segment.

“Temperature has an effect on the accuracy of barometric altimeters, indicated altitude, and true altitude,” explains section 7-3-1 of the Aeronautical Information Manual. “When the ambient (at altitude) temperature is colder than standard, the aircraft's true altitude is lower than the indicated barometric altitude.”

The Aeronautical Information Manual includes a cold temperature error table as well as details for determining the correction that must be made during preflight planning.

In addition to barometric altimeter errors, colder-than-standard temperatures can also affect the rate of descent needed on an approach. “Non-standard temperatures can result in a change to effective vertical paths and actual descent rates when using aircraft baro-VNAV equipment for vertical guidance on final approach segments. A lower than standard temperature will result in a shallower descent angle and reduced descent rate. Conversely, a higher than standard temperature will result in a steeper angle and increased descent rate. Pilots should consider potential consequences of these effects on approach minima, power settings, sight picture, visual cues, etc., especially for high-altitude or terrain-challenged locations and during low-visibility conditions.”

Pilots must make the altitude correction on their own and report the correction to air traffic control if it occurs on the intermediate or missed approach segment. In a notice released August 10, the FAA emphasized that it is pilots’ responsibility to make the corrections: “ATC is not responsible for making any altitude corrections and/or advising pilots that an altitude correction is required at a cold temperature airport.”

The updated list of cold temperature airports will be in effect until September 8, 2022.

The program previously published the information in the Notices to Airmen Publication. The FAA no longer publishes the Notices to Airmen Publication, so in July 2020, the agency began publishing the information in the Aeronautical Information Manual.

Alyssa J. Miller
Alyssa J. Cobb
The former senior director of digital media, Alyssa J. Cobb was on the AOPA staff from 2004 until 2023. She is a flight instructor, and loves flying her Cessna 170B with her husband and two children. Alyssa also hosts the weekly Fly with AOPA show on the AOPA Pilot Video YouTube channel.
Topics: Advocacy, Airport Advocacy, Weather

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