1. General Procedures
1.1 Airway Clearances
In the Bahrain FIR, airway clearances must be given on initial contact.
ENR Controller: "FDB738, Bahrain Radar, Identified. Cleared airway P559 NALPO."
1.2 Radar Identification Procedures
Aircraft shall not be considered radar identified until the controller has verified the aircraft position and observed the assigned squawk code.
Acceptable methods of radar identification include:
- Observation of an aircraft squawking an assigned discrete SSR code.
- Identification transfer from another radar controller.
- Position correlation with reported navigation fixes.
- ADS-B or Mode S identification where applicable.
Radar Identification Example
ENR Controller: "GFA512, Bahrain Radar, identified, cleared airway P559 NALPO."
If an aircraft is observed squawking an incorrect code, the controller shall instruct the pilot to reset the assigned transponder code prior to continuing radar services.
Radar Identification
Controllers shall ensure radar identification is maintained at all times whilst providing radar separation services.
1.3 Minimum Separation
Aircraft operating in the Bahrain FIR, excluding the TMA and CTR, will be separated by 1000FT vertically.
| Traffic distance from Radar Head | Minimum Lateral Separation |
|---|---|
| > 150 NM | 10NM |
| < 150 NM | 5NM |
Exceptions
When one aircraft is supersonic, the minimum lateral separation is increased to 20 NM.
1.4 RVSM Procedures
Reduced Vertical Separation Minimum (RVSM) operations are applicable within the Bahrain FIR between FL290 and FL410 inclusive.
Controllers shall ensure:
- Aircraft are RVSM approved when operating within RVSM airspace.
- Standard vertical separation of 1000FT is maintained within RVSM airspace.
- Non-RVSM aircraft are handled in accordance with applicable separation requirements.
1.5 Supersonic Operations
Supersonic aircraft operating within the Bahrain FIR require increased separation standards.
When one aircraft is operating at supersonic speeds: - Minimum lateral separation shall increase to 20 NM. - Controllers should anticipate rapid closure rates and descent planning requirements.
1.6 Sector Coordination & Handoffs
Controllers operating within the Bahrain FIR shall ensure coordination is completed prior to transferring aircraft between sectors.
This includes coordination of:
- Cleared level
- Direct routings
- Speed restrictions
- Holding instructions
- Non-standard operations
Where operationally practical, silent handoffs may be utilised between Bahrain ACC sectors provided there are no changes to the aircraft’s clearance or profile.
Non-standard climb, descent or routing requests must be coordinated with the receiving FIR prior to approval.
Transfer Expectations
Aircraft should normally be transferred prior to entering the receiving controller’s area of responsibility unless otherwise coordinated.
1.7 Enroute Holds
| Hold Identifier | Vertical Limits | Inbound Holding Course | Leg Time | Turn Direction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ITNAS | 6000FT - FL460 | 320° | 1.5 | Right |
| VELOG | 5000FT - FL290 | 142° | 1.5 | Left |
| ALMOK | 6000FT - FL460 | 288° | 1.5 | Right |
| SOLOB | 6000FT - FL460 | 294° | 1.5 | Right |
1.8 Speed Control Procedures
Bahrain Radar may utilise speed control to assist with sequencing and traffic flow management.
Typical speed control measures include:
- Mach Number restrictions above FL280.
- IAS restrictions during descent sequencing.
- Reductions for spacing into OBBI, OMAE and OTDF arrivals.
Unless otherwise instructed:
- Aircraft shall comply with 250 KIAS below FL100.
- Controllers should avoid excessive speed reductions that may negatively affect sequencing efficiency.
Speed Control Example
ENR Controller: "UAE221, reduce speed Mach decimal 78."
ENR Controller: "QTR818, maintain 280 knots."