India's overall aviation safety score to improve post UN body
audit
NEW DELHI: India's ranking in the overall aviation
safety score given by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) is
set to improve significantly.
Following an audit last year, the United
Nation's aviation arm had lowered India's "effective implementation" (EI) from
65.82% to 57.44% against world average of 62% mainly on the issue of air traffic
controllers' (ATCO) licensing. An ICAO team again audited the Directorate
General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) from November 12-21 to see if the shortcomings
had been addressed to make flying safer, and before leaving, told the Indian
authorities that the country's EI score could rise to 74%.
The overall EI
figure is arrived at as an aggregate of individual scores in eight fields like
legislation, organisation, personnel licensing and airworthiness of aircraft.
This score gives an overall picture of how a country is complying with global
aviation safety practices under different heads.
Asked how the ICAO audit
went, DGCA chief BS Bhullar said: "ICAO team have concluded their validation
process of DGCA oversight system in areas of legislation, organisation, air
navigation services, aerodromes and accident investigation last Wednesday (Nov
21). As per their protocol, they only share verbally the provisional outcome at
the end of the exercise. Provisional result is encouraging and likely to improve
our EI by about 17%. This may further go up significantly once ATCO licensing is
completed by DGCA as per mandate of Ministry. These are provisional results
which need to be ratified by ICAO HQ team. This process takes about three
months."
The agency's "universal safety oversight audit program" (USOAP)
audit last November had objected to ATCOs being employees of the same
organisation that licences them, the Airports Authority of India (AAI). This,
they said, was akin to an airline issuing flying licence to pilots and then
making them fly its planes. Due to this the EI of the area of personnel
licensing alone fell from 89.47% to 26.04%. India has now decided an external
agency, DGCA, will issue licences to ATCOs.
At an EI of 57.44%, India's
score was lower than Pakistan and North Korea and just over that of small
countries like Papua New Guinea, Timor-Leste, Vanuatu and Samoa.
"ICAO
audited five areas this November - organisation, legislation, aerodromes, air
navigation services and accident investigation. In the pre-departure briefing,
they told us our scores in all of these will rise and very substantially in
three area," said the source.
Meanwhile, the US Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) also audited the DGCA on October 31 and November 1. The
American aviation safety regulator had made about 30 observations earlier this
July. "Their biggest finding in July was that some charter/private plane
operators from India fly to US using aircraft and the DGCA does not have flight
operations inspectors type-rated on those planes. That issue has been resolved
and the FAA audit also went off very successfully for India. We will retain our
category one safety ranking," said sources.
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