Definition
A method of flying and teaching flight that focuses on managing the airplane's total energy state — the combination of altitude (potential energy), airspeed (kinetic energy), and engine power (chemical energy being added) — rather than treating pitch, power, and airspeed as separate, isolated controls. The pilot continuously monitors and adjusts how energy is being added, traded, or dissipated to achieve the desired flight path and airspeed.
Plain English
A way of thinking about flying where you treat height, speed, and engine power as one combined pool of energy that you actively manage, instead of working each control separately.
Context Anchor
Seen in FAA discussions of energy management, especially when learning how altitude, airspeed, power, and descent planning work together.
Derivation
‘Energy-centered’ means the approach is built around the concept of energy. In physics, energy is the capacity to do work — in an airplane, that capacity comes from height, speed, and fuel being burned. Putting ‘energy’ at the center reframes flying as an energy management task rather than a stick-and-throttle task.
Why Pilots Care
Helps pilots avoid unstable approaches that lead to hard landings, runway overruns, or stalls by keeping energy balanced from the start of the descent.
Analogy
It is like managing money in an account: altitude and airspeed are what you have available, power can add more, and drag or climbing can spend it. The goal is to arrive at each point with the right amount, not too much or too little.
Grounding Statement
If you are high and fast, you have a lot of energy and need to shed some; if you are low and slow, you have little energy and need to add some — the energy-centered approach asks the pilot to constantly assess that picture.
Intuition Check
Do not read approach here as only the final path to a runway. Here, approach means a way of thinking about and controlling the airplane.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor used an energy-centered approach to explain why pulling back on the yoke without adding power eventually led to a loss of airspeed.
Example Sentence 2
By managing the descent from pattern altitude using an energy-centered approach, the pilot kept the airplane on a steady glide path all the way to touchdown.