Hi rubber,
An unstable approach does not automatically mean an unsafe approach. It infers the approach was not flown within defined tolerances and as such the margins of safety were compromised to a greater or lesser extent. In only 5% of these cases, the the approach was so bad, the captain threw it away.
According to the TEM paper "
Defensive Flying for Pilots: An Introduction to Threat and Error Management
" put out by the Uni Texas, those statistics actually read as: "About 30% of all UASs occur as part of a chain of events that starts with a threat
that is not managed well and leads to a crew error, which in turn is mismanaged to a UAS." i.e. 30% started as a threat, progressed to an error which ended up as an UAS.
It is possible for a threat to result in an UAS without any crew error involved e.g. sudden windshear on approach leading to a drop in approach speed: this is an external threat leading to a UAS but no crew error was involved.
A UAS may also result also from a previously unmanaged UAS e.g. pitot heat not turned on in icing conditions (UAS), the aircraft loses ASI functionality during the approach.
Cheers,
Rich