Flight delays in Delhi fog: Blame it on pilots not trained to fly in
zero visibility
Aircraft seen in dense fog at a runway at Chowdhury Charan Singh
Airport in Lucknow on Thursday.
With shortage of pilots
trained to fly in zero visibility conditions (Category III)
leading to delays and cancellation of flights in the national capital, the
Directorate General of Civil Aviation has said that if the crew of an airlines
is not trained to fly in CAT III conditions, its operations in
Delhi will be suspended during the next fog season.
The DGCA has
constituted a technical committee to make Delhi a zero-diversion airport from
next season. CAT III is an instrumental landing system that allows aircraft to
take off and land even when the visibility at the runway falls to
zero.
Seven domestic commercial operators fly to and fro Delhi. Sources
say all these airlines have been asked to ensure that their crews are trained to
fly using CAT III system. "Both the commander and the co-pilot flying in and out
of Delhi would have to be trained to fly in zero visibility," said Prabhat
Kumar, director general of civil aviation.
According to DGCA records,
1,283 commanders and 965 co-pilots of these airlines are trained to fly in CAT
III conditions - which is roughly only half their strength. In the past 10 days,
more than 600 flights flying in and out of Delhi have been affected because of
dense fog.
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