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.