City
Epaper

Govt sets ball rolling for DGCA overhaul, sets up panel

By IANS | Updated: January 3, 2020 19:15 IST

The government has set the ball rolling for the complete overhaul of aviation regulator, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), to bring it at par with other global regulators.

Open in App

The Civil Aviation Ministry has constituted a committee headed by former Skill Development Secretary and also Air India ex-chief Rohit Nandan for this purpose.

Members of the panel include former DGCA chief Satender Singh and a representative from global aviation consultancy, the Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation (CAPA). The terms of reference (ToR) for the committee include studying the best practices globally and suggest measures to put a technically strong body in place.

"It was long due. The organisation has been in dire need of a restructuring. The committee would suggest how best the DGCA can be restructured. It will also suggest how more autonomy could be ensured. It will also look into the financial aspect," said a person familiar with the development.

Given that the domestic air traffic has grown multifold in the last one decade, experts are of the view that India needs a strong aviation safety authority on the lines of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) of the US.

"The DGCA is currently woefully short of the required manpower given the size of Indian aviation. It currently does not have the power to hire professionals on their own and it has to go Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) for each appointment. The regulator currently lacks the teeth," said Rajan Mehra, CEO of Club One Air and former India head of Qatar Airways.

The UPA government had earlier proposed to set up financially autonomous Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) but it never saw the light of the day. An autonomous authority with complete administrative and financial freedom had been envisaged to ensure safety oversight.

Aviation safety consultant Captain Mohan Ranganathan said that the strengthening of regulatory oversight had been pointed out as far back as 2006 and subsequently, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) audit also observed this.

"One of the reasons why India is getting so many audits done is because even though we keep telling them we comply with that, the fact that the credibility is so low that they (ICAO) keep coming almost every year," he said.

The DGCA is mostly been headed by Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officers instead of a technical professional. Arun Kumar, a 1989 batch IAS officer of Haryana cadre, currently heads the aviation safety regulator.

(Nirbhay Kumar can be contacted at nirbhay.k@.in)

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: DgcaAir IndiaIcao
Open in App

Related Stories

National'Bias Towards Pilot Error': Airline Pilots’ Association of India Questions Air India Crash Probe Findings

NationalBoeing Issues Statement on Air India Crash Report, Says 'Continue to Support Investigation'

NationalAir India Delhi to Washington Flight AI-103 Cancelled Midway in Vienna Due to Technical Snag

NationalAhmedabad Air India Plane Crash Due to Dual Engine Failure? Landing Gear and Wing Flaps of AI-171 Retracted During Takeoff

NationalAnother Air India Aircraft Plunged 900 Feet After Takeoff, Hours After AI-171 Crash

कारोबार Realted Stories

BusinessNipun Taneja Reveals the Top Marketing Jobs AI Will Takeover in the Next 5 Years

BusinessNipun Taneja Shares Top 5 Performance Marketing Strategies to Unlock Explosive ROI

BusinessCoated Lens - The Platform Connecting Creative Professionals with Brands & Clients - Launches Creative Clash 2025

BusinessIndustrialists in Punjab demand to revamp focal points

BusinessWipro's Q1 profit rises 11 pc to Rs 3,336 crore, announces Rs 5 interim dividend