Safety first: On Nepal’s
Tara Air crash
JUNE 02, 2022 00:10 IST
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Nepal should not sacrifice aviation safety for the sake of commercial
tourism
The grim images of the wreckage
of a Tara Air de Havilland DHC-6-300 Twin Otter aircraft in Nepal have once again highlighted the
complexities of ensuring aviation safety in one of the most challenging
environments in the world, and in regulating the mountain nation’s Short
Take-off and Landing (STOL) flights that are a tourist draw. The plane with 22
passengers, including an Indian family, was on an ‘air trek’ along the scenic
yet aerially treacherous Pokhara to Jomsom route on Sunday when it lost radar
contact at around 13,000 feet. STOL operations call for well-honed piloting skills, and as 3-D
terrain maps of the flight path show, danger lurks in every corner in the form
of jagged peaks, narrow passes and fickle weather. The small unpressurised
craft used in this sector operate at a ceiling of 13,000 feet and are airborne
for a short duration — oxygen supplies are needed for all passengers if flights
exceed over 30 minutes above 13,000 ft. Flights are characterised by manoeuvres
of 90 degree turns in valleys that have at times just wing length clearance.
And as in any competitive tourism market crowded with various STOL operators,
there are many pressures that can tell on the crew: commercial stress points
such as not having wasted fuel moments and ensuring passenger contentment by
pushing the envelope of crucial visual flight rules (VFR). Not following VFR is
cited as the main cause of accidents in Nepal’s STOL operations.
So, is Nepal pushing the boundaries in air safety?
Data put out by the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal show domestic air travel
having risen by 15.45% in 2018, though registering a dip in 2019-20 largely on
account of travel restrictions following the global COVID-19 pandemic. But,
interestingly, country data over the past 10 years have shown a sharp drop in
the accident rate in general, the only blip being a rise in helicopter
incidents with growing copter operations in logistics, relief and rescue, and tourism.
In the same timeframe, the STOL sector has seen a higher rate of accidents than
trunk route air operations; of the 19 accidents, 16 were STOL aircraft.
Accident analysis has shown Controlled Flight into Terrain, Runway excursions
and Loss of Control In-flight as the leading causes. A more realistic check
lies in the Universal Safety Oversight Audit Programme of the International
Civil Aviation Organization monitoring safety oversight obligations by all 193
member-states (as of June 2020), in which Nepal’s scores — it last participated
in the programme in 2017 — dropped in ‘Organization’ and ‘Accident
Investigation’. In an era of improving global air safety, Nepal needs to scale
a crucial summit by working on pending legislation that unbundles its civil
aviation body into a regulator and service provider, paving the way for a
full-fledged safety system, and in turn enabling safer STOL operations.
Status: | Information is only available from news or social media reports |
Date: | Sunday 29 May 2022 |
Time: | ca 10:10 |
Type: | de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter 300 |
Operator: | Tara Air |
Registration: | 9N-AET |
MSN: | 619 |
First flight: | 1979-04-21 (43 years 2 months) |
Engines: | 2 Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-27 |
Crew: | Fatalities: 3 / Occupants: 3 |
Passengers: | Fatalities: 19 / Occupants: 19 |
Total: | Fatalities: 22 / Occupants: 22 |
Aircraft damage: | Destroyed |
Aircraft fate: | Written off (damaged beyond repair) |
Location: | Sanosware ( Nepal) |
Crash site elevation: | 4420 m (14501 feet) amsl |
Phase: | En route (ENR) |
Nature: | Domestic Scheduled Passenger |
Departure airport: | Pokhara Airport (PKR/VNPK), Nepal |
Jomsom Airport (JMO/VNJS), Nepal | |
Flightnumber: | 197 |
Tara Air flight 197, a DHC-6 Twin Otter 300, impacted a mountainside at 14500 feet while on a domestic flight from Pokhara to Jomsom, Nepal. All 22 occupants suffered fatal injuries.
The flight was the first of five daily Tara Air flights from Pokhara to Jomsom, scheduled to depart at 06:15 hours. The flight was delayed because the Lete Pass on the route was covered up with clouds. The Twin Otter finally departed at 09:55, after two aircraft of Summit Air had departed for Jomsom. The flight took off from runway 04 and made a left-hand turn to follow the valley/pass on a heading of about 300°. About 10:06 the flight turned to the north towards Jomsom until it struck the side of a mountain.
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