

SESAR Deployment Manager publishes SDP Monitoring View 2025
The yearly update of the SDP Monitoring View represents the most comprehensive and exhaustive document on how Common Project One is moving
The SESAR Deployment Manager is entrusted by the European Commission to monitor the implementation of Common Project One (CP1), and such mandate is balanced by the parallel obligation set on operational stakeholders and States to report on its deployment.
Representing the sole reference for the status of the CP1 Regulation, the SDP Monitoring View provides a complete and detailed picture bringing together ground and airborne-related information, providing progress of specific technological and operational elements, the status of individual stakeholders, and detailed country-by-country overviews.
The implementation of all technological and operational elements within the CP1 scope is monitored through close cooperation between the SESAR Deployment Manager Strategic and Technical Execution team and the operational stakeholders affected by the Regulation. Implementation needs are identified as “gaps”, defined by the combination of the required technical or operational elements (SDP Families) and the location where they must be deployed (airport or country).
Through different reporting methods, SDM experts are able to track the evolution of gap progress and status during the years, allowing the identification of the pace at which deployment activities are delivering their tangible benefits. Moreover, this process enables the measurement of the gradually reducing scope of remaining activities to be performed to achieve the full deployment of CP1. The in-depth nature of the SDP Monitoring View helps stakeholders to coordinate their future investments, whilst also identifying potential delays and avoiding significant implementation gaps.
The latest edition of this thorough report shows a steady improvement of the deployment status in terms of closed implementation gaps, as 53% of CP1 Regulation is already implemented and an additional 42% is ongoing, totalling an amount of 95% of the entire CP1. As of 31st December 2025, 6 SDP Families in AF3, AF4, and AF5 were fully deployed:
· Family 3.1.1 - Airspace Management and Advanced Flexible Use of Airspace
· Family 3.1.2 - Management of Predefined Airspace Configurations
· Family 3.2.1 - Initial Free Route Airspace
· Family 4.1.1 - Enhanced Short Term ATFCM Measures
· Family 4.2.1 - Interactive Rolling NOP
· Family 5.1.1 - Common SWIM PKI and cyber security
The deployment pace continues, reflecting the sustained commitment of operational stakeholders. In order to keep the deployment momentum, SDM has established a series of priority actions, including: assessment and mitigation of risks derived from planning beyond regulatory deadlines, accelerating System-Wide Information Management (SWIM) services adoption and pushing forward Flight and Flow Information for a Collaborative Environment (FF-ICE), and rolling out a comprehensive programme to stimulate the transition to Trajectory-Based Operations (TBO).
More than a decade after the launch of the coordinated Deployment Phase, the modernisation of the European Air Traffic Management (ATM) systems and infrastructure has become an operational reality. This transformation is already delivering tangible performance benefits to the aviation community, its stakeholders, and ultimately to European passengers.
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