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Sky-high? Your risks when taking a freefall

By October 14, 2012No Comments

Last weekend Felix Baumgartner set a world record for the highest ever skydive, casually hopping off a skateboard-sized platform some 39 kilometres above the New Mexico desert. Millions around the world watched (a record 8 million people in tuned in to Youtube to watch Baumgartner's feat) with bated breath as the Austrian adrenaline addict tumbled through the Earth's upper atmosphere, breaking the sound barrier in the process, before deploying his parachute and coasting to an elegant landing several minutes later. Never in doubt, as they say.

Whilst the true risks of such extreme experiments are seldom calculable, the jump did make me wonder just how dangerous a (normal) skydive is. After all, if they're relatively safe I might be better off getting my own balloon-borne space capsule and simply parachuting to work rather than taking the Tube (the subway/metro to the non-Brits).

Perhaps unsurprisingly, skydiving safety statistics are not the easiest things to get hold of. Although fatalities are well-documented, to get a sense of the overall risk we need to know about all the times everything went to plan. After some searching, I decided to settle on a (regularly cited) statistic specific to parachuting in the US, where it's claimed there is approximately 1 death per 150,000 jumps.

150,000 is quite a big number, but how big is 'big'? The simplest way to look at this is to compare it with other travel safety statistics. After all, we don't tend to worry too much when getting on a bus or a train, or even into our cars, so how does skydiving compare? It sounds easy, but unfortunately when travel safety statistics are involved, things aren't entirely straightforward.

"Planes are statistically the safest way to travel" is a familiar mantra for those who get a touch nervy when heading to the airport. But what does this actually mean? It turns out there are (at least) three different ways one can define 'safest' – fewest deaths per journeys taken, time travelled, or distance travelled – but only one of these puts air travel at the top.

Travel safety statistics – deaths per billion…
…journeys …hours …kilometres
Bus: 4.3 Bus: 11.1 Air: 0.05
Rail: 20 Rail: 30 Bus: 0.4
Van: 20 Air: 30.8 Rail: 0.6
Car: 40 Water: 50 Van: 1.2
Foot: 40 Van: 60 Water: 2.6
Water: 90 Car: 130 Car: 3.1
Air: 117 Foot: 220 Bicycle: 44.6
Bicycle: 170 Bicycle: 550 Foot: 54.2
Motorcycle: 1,640 Motorcycle: 4,840 Motorcycle: 108.9

Whilst the relatively large distances usually covered by aircraft mean they have a huge advantage over most other forms of transport (space travel is presumably an exception), in terms of deaths per journeys of time spent travelling it's buses and trains that lead the way. Which statistic one chooses does, as always, depend on what question one is interested in answering (and the relevant Wikipedia page has an interesting discussion of this), but it is perhaps worth noting that buses and trains are safer than cars on all three counts, whilst motorcycles are the most dangerous by a considerable margin.

So where does skydiving fit in? We already know that (in the US, at least) one sees approximately one death per 150,000 jumps. Converting this so we can compare it with our table, that's around 6,700 deaths per billion 'journeys'. Fairly dangerous then, but perhaps surprising that (in terms of journeys taken) a parachute jump is only about four times as dangerous as taking a motorcycle out for a spin.

Calculations for time and distance are trickier (and arguably meaningless), given the variation in jump height, angle of fall, chute deployment times, and so on. However, in the interests of completeness I'll assume an average fall of 14,000 feet (around 4.3 kilometres), a fall time of around six minutes, and (most importantly) that no-one is going to be too concerned with such a slapdash approach. These numbers work out to about 1,500 deaths per billion kilometres, and a whopping 67,000 deaths per billion hours travelled. Not very safe (although admittedly not very scientific, either). Guess my parachute commute will have to wait.

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