GS 2: GovernanceGS 3: Economy
Reform cannot wait, aviation safety is at stake, Pg6
The article discusses critical systemic flaws in India's aviation safety architecture, highlighted by the Air India Boeing 787 incident in Ahmedabad, and argues for immediate reforms to prevent further disasters.
Key Highlights:
- Preliminary report on the June 2025 Air India crash in Ahmedabad is inconclusive, raising questions on investigation credibility.
- Systemic issues include flawed regulation, unsafe airspace, compromised airworthiness, and poor working conditions for crew and engineers.
- Courts have intervened through Public Interest Litigations (PILs) to halt hazardous constructions near airports.
- Over 1,000 vertical obstacles now violate aviation safety norms around Mumbai airport.
- Key regulatory failure lies in the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) and Ministry of Civil Aviation (MoCA).
- Judiciary must actively oversee aviation safety and re-evaluate how human life is valued in compensation mechanisms.
Detailed Insights:
- Loss of Trust in Investigations: The aviation safety ecosystem lacks transparency and credibility, especially from the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB).
- Swiss Cheese Model of Failures: Aviation accidents result from multiple aligned failures — not just pilot error but also infrastructure, regulation, and systemic loopholes.
- Lack of Mental Health Support: Air crew face psychological stress with punitive outcomes for mental health disclosures, which undermines safety.
- Regulatory Complicity: Height restrictions around airports were bypassed post-2008, with ICAO studies misused and oversight diluted by statutory legitimisation in 2015.
- Operational Risks Across India: Even greenfield airports like Navi Mumbai and Noida face obstacle-induced runway compromises, such as displaced thresholds.
- Technical Capacity Deficits: DGCA is over-reliant on foreign regulators like FAA and EASA for certifying aircraft and engines.
- Pilot and Crew Exploitation: Airlines routinely violate Flight Time Duty Limitations (FTDL); DGCA’s NOC requirement restricts pilot mobility, increasing coercive conditions.
- AME and ATCO Overload: Aircraft Maintenance Engineers and Air Traffic Controllers suffer from long hours, understaffing, and lax enforcement of safety mandates.
- Whistle-blower Suppression: Reporting unsafe practices leads to transfers or terminations, deterring systemic correction.
- Judicial Oversight Needed: Despite past PIL success, judiciary now defers excessively to state technical authorities, weakening safety advocacy.
Way Forward:
- Strengthen the independence and transparency of accident investigations by reforming the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) and ensuring public disclosure of findings.
- Modernize and empower the DGCA with greater regulatory autonomy, technical expertise, and strict oversight of both state and private operators.
- Enforce and monitor height restrictions and obstacle-free zones around airports to address rampant violation of aviation safety norms.
- Mandate mental health support and end punitive actions for disclosures among crew and engineers.
Scientific/Technical Concepts Involved:
- Swiss Cheese Model: A framework for accident causation where multiple layers of defense have inherent flaws ("holes"); accidents occur when these align.
- Displaced Threshold: A section of runway not available for landing due to obstacles, shortening effective runway length.
- Flight Time Duty Limitation (FTDL): Rules limiting how long pilots and crew can work continuously to avoid fatigue-related incidents.
- Inner Horizontal Surface (IHS): A regulatory airspace zone around airports where obstacle heights must be tightly controlled.
Mains Mock Question:
Critically examine the systemic failures in India’s aviation safety ecosystem. What reforms are necessary to ensure accountability, compliance, and long-term public safety in the aviation sector?