Join ARSA Ask ARSA Pay ARSA

U.S.-Brazil MIP Goes Live

On Oct. 1, the Maintenance Implementation Procedures (MIP) between the United States and Brazil entered into force. The FAA confirmed the agreement’s status in a Sept. 30 Information for Operators (InFO).

The MIP between the FAA and Brazil’s National Civil Aviation Agency (ANAC) was signed on Nov. 5, 2018; the related Maintenance Annex Guidance (MAG) was signed June 15, 2023. However, it was not until Aug. 2 that the FAA notified ANAC it had completed the procedures, guidance, and training necessary to implement the MIP.

The MIP establishes terms and conditions for mutual acceptance of maintenance facility inspections and evaluations by the FAA and ANAC in the United States, its territories, and Brazil. The InFO explains that effective Oct. 1, 2024, a maintenance facility certificated by the FAA as a 14 CFR part 145 repair station and certificated by ANAC as a Brazilian Regulation of Civil Aviation (RBAC) 145 maintenance organization, must comply within two years with all the requirements of the MIP and MAG.

The InFO recommends impacted repair stations begin planning now to implement an acceptable supplement as specified in the MAG. These maintenance organizations will receive a letter from the FAA or ANAC outlining the conditions for transfer of oversight, which will occur within 24 months after the MIP’s entry into force (i.e., by Oct. 1, 2026).

In the United States the MIP’s entry into force primarily impacts repair stations working on products (aircraft, engines, and propellers). Brazil takes a very enlightened perspective on accepting work by repair stations whose local civil aviation authorities are the FAA, Transport Canada Civil Aviation, the UK Civil Aviation Authority, and the national authorities of European Union Aviation Safety Agency member states. Brazil does not require such repair stations to have separate ANAC certification to perform maintenance, preventive maintenance, rebuilding, and alterations on components and approve them for return to service for installation on Brazilian registered aircraft.

For more information on ANAC’s acceptance of foreign component maintenance, click here.



More from ARSA

FAA Suspends Problematic Part 43 Interpretation

On Oct. 15, the FAA responded to a request by ARSA and 15 other industry organizations by suspending a recently released legal interpretation that reversed years of well-established policy and…Read More

Helping FAA Quickly Meet New Foreign Oversight Requirements

On Oct. 4, ARSA joined Aircraft Electronics Association and Airlines for America in confirming for the FAA that new foreign oversight mandates from Congress’ reauthorization law are easily met through…Read More

Survey: Helping the Government’s Work

Researchers from the U.S. Government Accountability Office are auditing the FAA’s requirement that certificate holders waive the right to the Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA) to obtain a settlement…Read More

U.S.-Brazil MIP Goes Live

On Oct. 1, the Maintenance Implementation Procedures (MIP) between the United States and Brazil entered into force. The FAA confirmed the agreement’s status in a Sept. 30 Information for Operators…Read More

FAA Acknowledges Repair Station Paperwork Burden

On Sept. 26, ARSA commented on the FAA’s second Federal Register notice regarding its assessment of the paperwork burden associated with FAA requirements for repair station certificate applications. In general,…Read More
ARSA