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Relooking Into Indian Aviation Safety

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Aviation sector

Source: TH

Context: The Air India crash in Ahmedabad (June 2025) has reignited concerns over aviation safety. A preliminary AAIB report remains inconclusive, highlighting deeper issues in India’s aviation regulatory ecosystem.

About Relooking into Indian Aviation Safety:

What is the Aviation Sector?

The aviation sector includes airline operators, airport infrastructure, air traffic management, and regulatory authorities like DGCA and MoCA. It is a critical service infrastructure connecting geographies and enabling economic mobility.

India’s Aviation Status & Safety Snapshot:

3rd largest domestic aviation market globally (350+ million annual passengers).

• Daily traffic crossed 5 lakh passengers in 2024.

Domestic traffic grew 5.9%, international traffic by 11.4% in 2024.

AAIB crash reports (e.g., Kozhikode 2020, Ahmedabad 2025) expose systemic safety lapses.

• India has 13–18% women pilots, among the highest globally.

• Only 80 airports operate on green energy, while infrastructure races ahead of regulatory checks.

Importance Of The Aviation Sector:

Connectivity: Connects remote and aspirational districts under UDAN.

Economic Growth: Fuels tourism, trade, cargo, and services.

Employment: Pilot demand to reach 34,000+ by 2040; FTOs expanding.

Strategic Role: Supports national defense logistics and disaster response.

Global Integration: Boosts India’s image as a rising global aviation hub.

Challenges To Aviation Safety:

Regulatory Weakness: DGCA lacks independent technical expertise and relies heavily on FAA/EASA for safety decisions. This undermines India’s ability to take proactive, indigenous safety measures.

Airspace Encroachment: Over 1,000 vertical obstacles violate IHS norms around Mumbai airport alone. Judicial PILs show how MoCA and DGCA bypassed earlier statutory restrictions.

Pilot & Crew Fatigue: Airlines violate Flight Duty Time Limitations under DGCA-approved exemptions. Whistle-blowers face dismissal or demotion, silencing critical safety warnings.

Maintenance Gaps: AMEs face overwork without regulated duty hours; technicians with lesser skills are used. This cost-cutting practice increases the likelihood of undetected mechanical failures.

ATC Shortages: India faces an acute shortage of trained Air Traffic Control Officers across sectors. Duty-time limits and licensing reforms recommended post-Mangalore crash remain pending.

Infrastructural Overreach: High-rise buildings approved around airports violate safety buffer zones.

Way Ahead:

Independent Safety Regulator: Create an autonomous body to monitor aviation safety outside MoCA’s administrative ambit. This will ensure unbiased investigations and stricter regulatory enforcement.

Stringent Obstacle Control: Restore legal frameworks like the Aircraft Act and S.O. 988 for obstacle regulation. Enforce height restrictions around airports through statutory mechanisms.

Whistleblower Protection: Establish institutional safeguards to protect whistle-blowers from retaliation. Encourage reporting of violations through anonymous and secure channels.

ATCO and AME Reforms: Fix working hours for AMEs and ATCOs in line with global fatigue norms. Increase recruitment and licensing support to address long-term shortages.

Global Best Practices: Fully implement ICAO and FAA safety protocols with Indian contextual customization. Strengthen audit, compliance, and public transparency in accident inquiries.

Conclusion:

Aviation safety is not a technical formality—it is a non-negotiable public good. India must match its passenger volume growth with world-class safety culture. Reforms, accountability, and human lives can no longer be postponed—aviation safety must become a national priority.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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