Airservices Request for Information for Noise Information Management Services

Airservices Australia will release a Request for Information (RFI) for noise information management services this month.

This exercise seeks to understand current market capabilities of vendors that are able to provide noise information management services.

Airservices owns a network of noise monitors currently deployed at eight major airports which are approaching end of life. There is a growing requirement to provide additional monitoring services as Australia’s airport infrastructure expands and the demand for wider noise monitoring increases.

Airservices also provides noise and flight path data to the community via a website and manages a Noise Complaints Service which utilises the information and data modelling provided by the existing noise and flight path monitoring system (NFPMS).

Currently, the organisation’s NFPMS is managed by Bruel and Kjaer. The system generates reports that include aircraft movement statistics such as runway usage by the various categories of aircraft and movement profiles.

Airservices recognises that aircraft noise, a by-product of a growing economy, is the most significant cause of adverse community reaction to increased aviation operations and wants to ensure they are aware of all the most innovative solutions and available providers in the market.

An RFI will be released through AusTender in mid-January 2019. Vendors, both locally and internationally will need to be registered on AusTender to access RFI details.

For more information, visit https://www.airservicesaustralia.com/community/aircraft-noise/monitoring-aircraft-noise/

Related content:

Posted on: January 15, 2019

Posted in

More news
Related topics

Airservices provides safe, secure, efficient and environmentally responsible services to the aviation industry.

Infrastructure in the sky: Why Australia’s growth depends on getting airspace right

Australia is preparing for a 25-30% surge in air traffic over the next decade with billions of dollars pouring into airports, aircraft, drones and improved aviation services. But there’s a bottleneck that could undermine this nation-shaping investment – the largely invisible infrastructure of the sky.

Airservices Australia celebrates International Day of the Air Traffic Controller

It’s a niche, high-pressure and dynamic role – and not one for the faint-hearted – but Airservices Australia’s 900-strong air traffic controller (ATC) workforce wouldn’t have it any other way. Today, on International Day of the Air Traffic Controller (IDATC), we proudly honour our highly skilled, passionate and dedicated ATCs, who operate 24/7 to keep […]

Airservices Australia Releases September Australian Aviation Network Overview 

Airservices Australia has released its Australian Aviation Network Overview report for September 2025. Highlights include: About AirservicesAirservices Australia is a government-owned organisation responsible for safely and efficiently managing air traffic in 11 per cent of the world’s airspace, as well as the provision of aviation rescue fire fighting services at Australia’s busiest airports. We are regulated by […]

Airservices Australia Releases August Australian Aviation Network Overview 

Airservices Australia has released its Australian Aviation Network Overview report for August 2025. Highlights include: About AirservicesAirservices Australia is a government-owned organisation responsible for safely and efficiently managing air traffic in 11 per cent of the world’s airspace, as well as the provision of aviation rescue fire fighting services at Australia’s busiest airports. We are regulated by […]