Tag: Indian Airlines

  • Aircraft technical snags: DGCA crackdown finds insufficient engineering staff certifying planes

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: With airlines reporting multiple technical malfunction incidents, aviation regulator DGCA on Monday said it conducted spot checks and found that there is an insufficient number of required engineering personnel certifying planes of various carriers before their scheduled arrivals/departures in a short interval.

    Before each departure, an aircraft is checked and certified by an aircraft maintenance engineer (AME).

    The DGCA has now issued guidelines for airlines on the deployment of AME personnel and directed them to comply by July 28. 

    The spot checks also found that the AME teams of airlines are improperly identifying the “cause of a reported defect”, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA)’s order noted.

    “We will ask operators to be more vigilant. On our part also, we will further tighten our oversight,’’ said the Director General of Civil Aviation Arun Kumar. There will be more spot checks, audits of domestic airline operators, and this will ensure that airlines are more vigilant, he added.

    The DGCA has also found that there has been an “increasing trend of MEL (minimum equipment list) releases” of aircraft, the order said.

    “MEL releases” means an aircraft is allowed to fly with certain inoperative equipment or instruments for a specific period of time, until the repairs are done. It is also seen that airlines are resorting to frequent one-off authorisation to Category A certifying staff at transit stations which is not in line with existing regulatory provisions,” the DGCA said.

    ALSO READ | Aircraft technical snags: DGCA crackdown finds insufficient engineering staff certifying planes

    The engineering head of one of the Indian airlines explained that a Category A engineer is called a ‘limited scope engineer’, and he or she is allowed to certify and release planes for departures only when the aircraft does not have any complex defect.

    The Category B1 engineer is one step above the Category A engineer and he or she is capable of handling mechanical defects. Similarly, Category B2 engineering is capable of handling defects in the electronic equipment of planes.

    The DGCA said: “It has been decided that all aircraft at base and transit stations shall be released by certifying staff holding AME Category B1/B2 license with appropriate authorisation by their organisation.”

    The regulator told airlines to position Category B1 and Category B2 engineers at all base and transit stations and make sure that required tools and equipment are available. “Alternatively, you may opt for sending the certifying staff on flight duties,” the DGCA mentioned.

    The DGCA said that its directions must be complied with by July 28.

    The airline engineering head, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said that it will be very difficult for airlines to place Category B1 or Category B2 engineers on all transit stations. “If I operate one flight per day from Jorhat or Jharsuguda, how can I keep two Category B1 or B2 engineers — which are anyway in fewer numbers — just to certify and release that one flight,” the head explained.

    Meanwhile, Minister of Civil Aviation, Jyotiraditya M Scindia, held a high-level meeting following the air safety-related incidents. “There should be no compromise when it comes to the safety of people,’’ he said.

    There have been multiple technical malfunction incidents in Indian carriers’ planes during the last month.

    On Sunday, IndiGo’s Sharjah-Hyderabad flight was diverted to Karachi as a precautionary measure after pilots observed a defect in one of the engines.

    On Saturday night, the Calicut-Dubai flight of the Air India Express was diverted to Muscat after a burning smell was observed in the cabin mid-air. The smell was coming from one of the vents in the forward galley and the pilots, therefore, diverted the plane to Muscat and landed safely.

    A day earlier a bird, which was alive, was found in the cockpit of the Air India Express Bahrain-Kochi flight.

    A few days earlier, a SpiceJet flight SG11 made an emergency landing at Karachi airport. The Delhi to Dubai international flight suffered a technical fault and made the landing at Pakistan’s Karachi airport on July 5. A replacement flight ferried the passengers to Dubai later in the day. More than 150 passengers were present on board the Boeing 737 MAX aircraft.

    Indian carriers have landed in Pakistan as the flights involved were travelling between Gulf and India and the only flight route between India and Gulf nations either passes through Pakistan or over the Arabian Sea, adjacent to Pakistan.

    SpiceJet is under regulatory scanner right now. On July 6, the DGCA issued a show-cause notice to SpiceJet following at least eight incidents of technical malfunction in its aircraft since June 19.

    The DGCA is currently investigating all these incidents.

    ALSO READ | Will be ‘doubly careful’, strengthen aircraft inspection before flights: SpiceJet CMD

    (With inputs from Express News Service and Online Desk)

    NEW DELHI: With airlines reporting multiple technical malfunction incidents, aviation regulator DGCA on Monday said it conducted spot checks and found that there is an insufficient number of required engineering personnel certifying planes of various carriers before their scheduled arrivals/departures in a short interval.

    Before each departure, an aircraft is checked and certified by an aircraft maintenance engineer (AME).

    The DGCA has now issued guidelines for airlines on the deployment of AME personnel and directed them to comply by July 28. 

    The spot checks also found that the AME teams of airlines are improperly identifying the “cause of a reported defect”, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA)’s order noted.

    “We will ask operators to be more vigilant. On our part also, we will further tighten our oversight,’’ said the Director General of Civil Aviation Arun Kumar. There will be more spot checks, audits of domestic airline operators, and this will ensure that airlines are more vigilant, he added.

    The DGCA has also found that there has been an “increasing trend of MEL (minimum equipment list) releases” of aircraft, the order said.

    “MEL releases” means an aircraft is allowed to fly with certain inoperative equipment or instruments for a specific period of time, until the repairs are done. It is also seen that airlines are resorting to frequent one-off authorisation to Category A certifying staff at transit stations which is not in line with existing regulatory provisions,” the DGCA said.

    ALSO READ | Aircraft technical snags: DGCA crackdown finds insufficient engineering staff certifying planes

    The engineering head of one of the Indian airlines explained that a Category A engineer is called a ‘limited scope engineer’, and he or she is allowed to certify and release planes for departures only when the aircraft does not have any complex defect.

    The Category B1 engineer is one step above the Category A engineer and he or she is capable of handling mechanical defects. Similarly, Category B2 engineering is capable of handling defects in the electronic equipment of planes.

    The DGCA said: “It has been decided that all aircraft at base and transit stations shall be released by certifying staff holding AME Category B1/B2 license with appropriate authorisation by their organisation.”

    The regulator told airlines to position Category B1 and Category B2 engineers at all base and transit stations and make sure that required tools and equipment are available. “Alternatively, you may opt for sending the certifying staff on flight duties,” the DGCA mentioned.

    The DGCA said that its directions must be complied with by July 28.

    The airline engineering head, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said that it will be very difficult for airlines to place Category B1 or Category B2 engineers on all transit stations. “If I operate one flight per day from Jorhat or Jharsuguda, how can I keep two Category B1 or B2 engineers — which are anyway in fewer numbers — just to certify and release that one flight,” the head explained.

    Meanwhile, Minister of Civil Aviation, Jyotiraditya M Scindia, held a high-level meeting following the air safety-related incidents. “There should be no compromise when it comes to the safety of people,’’ he said.

    There have been multiple technical malfunction incidents in Indian carriers’ planes during the last month.

    On Sunday, IndiGo’s Sharjah-Hyderabad flight was diverted to Karachi as a precautionary measure after pilots observed a defect in one of the engines.

    On Saturday night, the Calicut-Dubai flight of the Air India Express was diverted to Muscat after a burning smell was observed in the cabin mid-air. The smell was coming from one of the vents in the forward galley and the pilots, therefore, diverted the plane to Muscat and landed safely.

    A day earlier a bird, which was alive, was found in the cockpit of the Air India Express Bahrain-Kochi flight.

    A few days earlier, a SpiceJet flight SG11 made an emergency landing at Karachi airport. The Delhi to Dubai international flight suffered a technical fault and made the landing at Pakistan’s Karachi airport on July 5. A replacement flight ferried the passengers to Dubai later in the day. More than 150 passengers were present on board the Boeing 737 MAX aircraft.

    Indian carriers have landed in Pakistan as the flights involved were travelling between Gulf and India and the only flight route between India and Gulf nations either passes through Pakistan or over the Arabian Sea, adjacent to Pakistan.

    SpiceJet is under regulatory scanner right now. On July 6, the DGCA issued a show-cause notice to SpiceJet following at least eight incidents of technical malfunction in its aircraft since June 19.

    The DGCA is currently investigating all these incidents.

    ALSO READ | Will be ‘doubly careful’, strengthen aircraft inspection before flights: SpiceJet CMD

    (With inputs from Express News Service and Online Desk)

  • Images from Kabul airport remind me of Kandahar hijacking horror: IC814 pilot

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: Images from Kabul airport over the the last few days have brought back the horrors of 22 years ago, says Devi Sharan, captain of Indian Airlines flight IC814 that was hijacked in December 1999 and taken to Kandahar in Afghanistan where it was held captive for an entire week.

    Photographs and videos of people crowding outside the Kabul airport and inside, with scores on the tarmac scrambling to get into planes to escape the Taliban that took control of the Afghanistan capital on Sunday, recall the desperation of that unforgettable winter, says Sharan.

    “It was like I have gone 22 years back. Over 20 years have passed, but the images (of today) are the same,” the 59-year-old told PTI in an interview.

    “The difference is that we were the only people at that time in Kandahar but now you can see a crowd at the (Kabul) airport. But definitely, these people are desperate to come out just like we wanted to come out,” he added.

    IC814 was heading from Kathmandu to New Delhi on December 24, 1999 — with 179 passengers and 11 crew members on board — when it was hijacked and taken to Taliban-controlled Kandahar by five Pakistani terrorists.

    Sharan was the captain, Rajinder Kumar the first officer and Anil Kumar Jaggia the flight engineer of IC814.

    The hijackers executed one passenger, Rupin Katyal, and finally negotiated the release of terrorists Masood Azhar Alvi, Syed Omar Sheikh and Mushtaq Ahmad Zargar from Indian jails on December 31, 1999, in exchange for the hostages.

    On Friday, Sharan said: “I find the images to be quite like of that time. Definitely, it gives us all the memories of horrors of that time. It reminds us of that.”

    He said there were two kinds of Taliban forces that they encountered at the Kandahar airport in December 1999.

    “One was Kabali. You can see these Talibanis with turbans and civil clothes and rocket launchers and all. So one force was this one which was type of a moral police. The other one was commandos,” he said.

    “These Kabalis, I would say, they were quite in favour of our hijackers. The commands were there only to ensure that there is no bloodshed there. They might be with the hijackers but they were definitely not with us,” he added.

    Sharan said no direct threat was issued by Taliban to him but you can see the “threat” as these Kabalis had surrounded the aircraft with rocket launchers and all.

    “So, you can see that threat that they would not let us go without agreeing to the demands (of the hijackers),” he said.

    On December 24, 1999, Sharan was first asked by hijackers to take the IC814 plane to Lahore.

    After Pakistan refused to let the flight land there, the aircraft was taken to Amritsar airport.

    Then, it was taken to Lahore airport, which allowed the plane to land this time at the last moment.

    Later, it departed from there and went to the Dubai airport, from where it was taken to the Kandahar airport.

    Sharan said he retired last year from Air India.

    Indian Airlines was merged with Air India in 2007.

    He said Jaggia passed away 7-8 years ago while Kumar is still with Air India.

    The Taliban swept across Afghanistan this month, seizing control of almost all key towns and cities including Kabul in the backdrop of the withdrawal of the US forces.

    Kabul fell to the Taliban on Sunday.

    The Taliban was removed from power in Afghanistan when the US-led forces attacked them in October 2001, a few weeks after terrorist attack on World Trade Centre on September 11, 2001.

  • Indian airlines’ CO2 emissions increased by 63.5 per cent between 2012 and 2019: MoS Civil Aviation

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: The Indian airlines carbon dioxide emissions increased by 63.5 per cent from 11,560 thousand tons in 2012 to 18,900 thousand tons in 2019, Minister of State for Civil Aviation VK Singh said on Wednesday.

    “The data shows an increasing trend in carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions (by the Indian carriers) over the years,” Singh stated in his written reply to a question in Rajya Sabha. He gave the details of CO2 emissions by the Indian carriers between 2012 and 2019.

    Singh stated the Indian carriers had 18,900 thousand tons of CO2 emissions in 2019, which was 11,560 thousand tons in 2012. “The DGCA (Directorate General of Civil Aviation) compiles CO2 emissions data based on the information received from the Indian scheduled carriers,” he said.

    In 2019, domestic flights by the Indian airlines led to 11,843 thousand tons of CO2 emissions, while their international flights led to 7,057 thousand tons of CO2 emissions, he mentioned. In 2012, the Indian carriers’ domestic flights had 6,135 thousand tons of CO2 emissions and their international flights had 5,425 thousand tons of CO2 emissions, the minister noted.

    Singh said the measures taken by the Centre to reduce the Indian carriers’ carbon footprint are optimised airspace utilisation, reduction of unwanted weight, avoiding moisture or dirt accumulation in aircraft, proper speed and flap management.

  • Airlines can operate maximum of 65 per cent pre-COVID domestic flights: Government

    The carriers have been operating only 50% of their pre-COVID domestic flights since June 1 in accordance with a May 28 order of the ministry.