City
Epaper

Airbus inks joint venture with Air India to launch pilot training centre in Gurugram

By ANI | Updated: January 18, 2024 23:10 IST

Hyderabad (Telangana) [India], January 18 : Airbus has entered into a 50:50 joint venture with the Tata-owned Air India ...

Open in App

Hyderabad (Telangana) [India], January 18 : Airbus has entered into a 50:50 joint venture with the Tata-owned Air India to launch a world-class pilot training centre in Gurugram, Haryana.

Airbus said that it is a delivering on its commitment to 'Skill India' intiative.

According to the statement released by aircraft manufacturing company, the Tata Airbus Training Centre will offer A320 and A350 flight training to 5,000 new pilots over 10 years.

Training centre will be spread over 3,300 sq mt and will be equipped with 10 Full Flight Simulators (FFS), flight training classrooms and briefing and debriefing rooms as part of the complete Airbus Flight Training Device setup.

The training centre is due to be operational starting early 2025 with the initial installation of four A320 FFS. The Tata Airbus Training Centre will offer courses approved by Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) and European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA), Airbus said.

Airbus further mentioned that it has also partnered with GMR Aero Technic to offer Aircraft Maintenance Engineering training courses at the latter's facility in Hyderabad.

"Airbus will provide training material such as trainee handbooks, examination database, online access to Airbus customised training modules and Airbus Competence Training (ACT) for Academy media package. Airbus will also train GMR instructors and provide continual assessment of the training centre," the press release said.

"As the fastest expanding aviation market in the world, India will need 41,000 pilots and 47,000 technicians in the next 20 years to support this growth. The pilot training centre with Air India and the maintenance training partnership with GMR are a testament to Airbus' commitment to developing human capital. Airbus is directly investing and operating training capabilities to ensure that the growth of the India aviation industry is accompanied by adequate skilled manpower that is readily available," said Remi Maillard, President and Managing Director, Airbus India and South Asia.

The latest announcements are part of Airbus' ambition to develop a holistic ecosystem in India, where the company is expanding its industrial footprint with aircraft assembly, component manufacturing, engineering design and development, MRO support, pilot and maintenance training as well as academic collaboration to foster human capital, Airbus said.

Airbus is also collaborating with the Vadodara-based Gati Shakti Vishwavidyalaya (GSV), Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur (IIT Kanpur) and Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bengaluru, to groom talent for the Indian aerospace sector.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsJonathan Milan crushes sprint rivals to seal first Tour de France stage win, Tadej Pogacar coasts through quiet day in yellow

Entertainment5 Reasons to Watch Maalik-Rajkummar Rao’s Gripping Gangster Drama This Weekend!

CricketWyatt-Hodge, Dunkley shine as England edge India in final-ball thriller to clinch final T20I

InternationalJaishankar meets Singapore's counterpart Vivian Bala, says "Singapore is at heart of India's Act East Policy"

BusinessIPL valuation hits $18.5 bn, up 12.9%, fueled by media rights, sponsors, and fan engagement

Business Realted Stories

BusinessIndian stock markets to track Q1 earnings, tariff talks, and macroeconomic data this week: Experts

BusinessCentre's semiconductor push could cut chip imports by USD20 bn: McKinsey

BusinessBillionaires gather in Sun Valley in US for Allen & Co.'s annual conference

BusinessAssam CM inaugurates nation's first ever Aqua Tech Park at Bagibari Sonapur

BusinessDonald Trump announces 30% import tariffs on EU and Mexico over trade and border issues