Definition
A set of navigation accuracy standards that an aircraft and its crew must meet to operate within designated oceanic airspace, most notably the North Atlantic. Aircraft must demonstrate a specified level of lateral and vertical navigation precision, carry approved long-range navigation equipment, and the crew must hold the appropriate authorization before flying in MNPS airspace.
Plain English
A rulebook for flying across the North Atlantic and similar oceanic regions. To use that airspace, your aircraft has to navigate accurately enough to stay in its assigned slot, and you need approval to be there.
Context Anchor
Seen when planning or discussing off-airway, oceanic, or remote-area routes that require specific navigation approval.
Derivation
Three plain words doing exactly what they say: a 'minimum' (the lowest acceptable level) 'navigation performance' (how accurately the aircraft navigates) 'specification' (a written standard). Together: the lowest acceptable navigation accuracy allowed in that airspace.
Why Pilots Care
Aircraft that meet MNPS can use more efficient routes and benefit from reduced separation standards that would otherwise not be permitted.
Intuition Check
MNPS is not a route and not a single instrument in the panel. It is an approval standard for how accurately the aircraft must be able to navigate in certain airspace.
Example Sentence 1
Before dispatching the transatlantic flight, the crew confirmed the aircraft was MNPS approved and that both long-range navigation systems were operating normally.
Example Sentence 2
The crew verified both navigation systems met MNPS requirements prior to entering the designated airspace.