55-1012.00

Aircraft Launch and Recovery Officers

Plan and direct the operation and maintenance of catapults, arresting gear, and associated mechanical, hydraulic, and control systems involved primarily in aircraft carrier takeoff and landing operations. Duties include supervision of readiness and safety of arresting gear, launching equipment, barricades, and visual landing aid systems; planning and coordinating the design, development, and testing of launch and recovery systems; preparing specifications for catapult and arresting gear installations; evaluating design proposals; determining handling equipment needed for new aircraft; preparing technical data and instructions for operation of landing aids; and training personnel in carrier takeoff and landing procedures.

5.5OUT OF 10SAFEHIGH RISK
Moderate Risk

AI will partially reshape this role

Safer than 56% of occupations we track

Frey & Osborne (2013) estimated 50% probability of automation for this role
paper →
56%
of jobs safer
445
jobs riskier than this
0.0%
projected growth

Disruption Vector

Disruption Type

Hybrid Threat

Both AI software and physical automation threaten different aspects of this role, creating a compound risk from multiple directions.

Aircraft Launch and Recovery Officers manage flight deck operations on naval vessels—a safety-critical, high-tempo military function requiring human judgment, authority, and accountability in dynamic combat and training environments. While AI is being integrated into naval aviation systems (NAVAIR AI programs), the command authority and real-time safety decision-making on a flight deck remains human-essential by military doctrine and practical necessity. The 2025-2027 outlook is stable; this is a military role governed by doctrine rather than commercial AI adoption pressures.

Disrupted byBoston DynamicsChatGPT / GPT-4oAmazon Robotics

Salary & Job Outlook

Median Annual Pay
N/A
US Bureau of Labor Statistics
10-Year Job Growth
0.0%
Little or no change
Education Required
Some college, no degree
Job Zone 3 / 5

AI Risk Timeline

5.5
5.8
6.1
6.7
Today
5 Years
10 Years
20 Years

Projection model: Based on current AI capability growth rates. High-risk occupations are projected to see compounding automation pressure, while human-centric roles show slower risk accumulation. These are statistical projections, not guarantees.

Skills Analysis — AI Vulnerability

AI can replicate (0)
AI-resistant (2)
Mixed
Active Listening75%
Speaking72%
Service Orientation70%
Coordination68%
Time Management65%

Career Pivot Paths

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Aircraft Launch and Recovery Officers

5.5
/ 10
Moderate Risk
55% automation risk

"Safe-ish. AI is your coworker, not your replacement. Yet."

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AIRCRAFT LAUNCH AND RECOVERY OFFICERS
5.5

/ 10

MODERATE RISK

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You're safer than a Bartenders but riskier than a Wholesale and Retail Buyers, Except Farm Products.

This analysis is for informational purposes only and is based on statistical models and academic research. It does not constitute career advice and is not a guarantee of future employment outcomes. AI impact varies significantly by employer, region, and individual circumstances. Learn about our methodology →