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Air crash puts focus on India infrastructure, safety

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Air crash puts focus on India infrastructure, safety

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An air crash in India that killed 158 people has underlined fears about safety gaps in the country's booming airline industry and raised doubts about whether infrastructure can keep pace with rapid economic growt


t was not clear what caused Saturday's crash, but pilots and aviation experts say regulatory oversight of safety and quality control are often poor. Staff training standards are also falling, they say.

Although India has had few major accidents in recent years, some half a dozen mid-air misses over the past year has underscored that safety issues exist.

Last year an Indian Airlines plane with about 150 passengers on board barely avoided a collision with an army helicopter that was part of the Indian president's entourage in Mumbai.

Indian media regularly reports about routine checks finding pilots reporting drunk for duty and in one instance last year pilots and crew were involved in a mid-air scuffle, leaving the aircraft to fly on its own for sometime.

"The Air India Express crash was waiting to happen," said A. Ranganathan, an airline safety consultant and pilot instructor.

"Safety standards in Indian aviation have been on the wane for the last six years. Efforts being made to correct the drift, but the systematic rot is so deep ... we are not likely to see any improvement in safety unless drastic changes are made."

Sustained robust growth has put more money in people's pockets, spurring air travel and an exponential growth in the number of low cost airlines. Domestic passenger traffic has tripled and international traffic doubled in the past five years.

But infrastructure may not have kept pace and a shortage of staff may be stretching both airlines and traffic control staff. Indian Commercial Pilot Association said in a statement 78 percent of crashes took place due to fatigue-related human error.

"You also need to augment the strength of air traffic control which is stretched," Kapil Kaul, head of the Center for Asia-Pacific Aviation in South Asia, told Reuters.

"DISASTER WAITING TO HAPPEN"

The hill-top airport at Mangalore, the site of Saturday's crash, had other geographical challenges, and critics say the runway, though adequate for landing the Boeing 737 that crashed, was not long or wide enough to leave any room for error.

"This was no accident, but the direct result of the deliberate failure of officials at the high levels," said a statement of Environment Support Group which had sought to block the construction of the runway.

While it was yet to be established if the accident was related to wider problems in India's aviation industry, experts say a lack of training, overworked staff and inadequate infrastructure only compounds the situation.

For instance, only seven radars serve Indian air space and only big airports have the latest low-visibility landing systems, a senior official of the Airports Authority of India told Reuters.

"A disaster was waiting to happen and we have been very lucky to have had no major accidents in the past 10 years," the official involved with aviation security said on condition of anonymity because of the issue's sensitivity.

In April 2008, then director general of civil aviation, Kanu Gohain, told the Mint newspaper that India had just three inspectors for 10 commercial airlines and 600 planes.

That number has now gone up, but many remain under-trained and a backlog of lapsed inspections may take years to clear.

A 2006 safety audit by the International Civil Aviation Organization listed India as worst on "technical personnel qualification and training."

As the airline sector expanded, a shortage of pilots was met by hiring foreign pilots, some 565 of them flying now. But the government has ordered airlines to replace them with Indians by next summer, raising concerns about how the country will be able to produce enough qualified pilots so quickly.

There are also calls to make inquiries into air accidents transparent. "To my knowledge in the last 50 years no inquiry report has been made public," Kaul said. "There is also the need for an independent safety board."

Air crash puts focus on India infrastructure, safety | Reuters
 
Air India Probe May Take Two Weeks to Unlock Fatal Crash Data

May 24 (Bloomberg) -- Investigators may spend as long as two weeks analyzing data before they can say what caused India’s deadliest air disaster in 14 years.
The fire-damaged cockpit voice recorder recovered from the hillside crash site yesterday should yield the necessary clues, the government said in a statement. The aviation regulator will seek to determine how a 2-1/2 year old Air India Express Boeing Co. 737-800 flown by experienced pilots overshot the runway and burst into flames, killing 158 passengers and crew.
Air travel has doubled in the past six years as rising disposable incomes in the world’s second-fastest growing major economy encourage people to shun trains and take a plane for long-distance journeys. The government plans to spend as much as $2.6 billion on modernizing the nation’s airports and aviation infrastructure, including 35 facilities in smaller cities.
“Before clearing aircraft orders, we need to think whether we have the infrastructure,” said A. Ranganathan, a Chennai, south India-based aviation consultant and a former commercial pilot. “Proper planning is required for infrastructure development.”
India needs 1,030 aircraft worth $138 billion over the next 20 years, and will be the fastest-growing air travel market for the next decade, Airbus SAS, the world’s largest planemaker, said in March. Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel said the same month that India needs to more than quadruple the number of airports from the current 90 to meet the increased traffic.
Traffic Jumps
Domestic air traffic in India jumped to more than 35 million passengers in the year ended in March 2009 from less than 15 million six years ago, according to the Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation. Seven carriers operate 11 different brands in India, compared with four airlines in 2003, it said.
“When you have such high levels of growth, it creates enormous stress on the system,” said Peter Harbison, chairman of the industry consultancy. “It is going to be a big issue for India because the traffic potential is so vast.”
India’s airports reported as many as 70 “near misses” in the last three years, according to minister Patel. The reasons include “co-ordination failures” and stress and fatigue due to heavy traffic, he told Parliament in March.
Flight IX-812 from Dubai to Mangalore crashed at about 6:05 a.m. on May 22. All the bodies of the dead have been removed from the wreckage of the Boeing 737-800, Harpreet Singh, Air India’s emergency response coordinator, said yesterday in Mumbai. Of those, 87 have been identified. There were eight survivors.
Investigators from India’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation are leading the probe into the crash.
Refinance Loans
National Aviation Co. of India Ltd., Air India’s owner, is seeking to raise as much as $1.15 billion to refinance loans that funded the purchase of 21 Airbus SAS planes.
The accident was the worst in India in 14 years, according to the Aviation Safety Network website. Houston, Texas-based disaster management company Kenyon International Emergency Services has been asked to assist in the rescue operation, Air India’s Singh said. The airline will also conduct an internal inquiry. The airline and India’s aviation regulator have declined to comment on what may have caused the accident.
Since India’s last major air disaster in 2000, Kingfisher Airlines Ltd., SpiceJet Ltd., IndiGo, GoAirlines (India) Pvt. and Paramount Airways Ltd. have started services, as the world’s fastest expanding major economy after China saw demand surge.
Technical Assistance
Boeing is sending a team to provide technical assistance to the investigation at the invitation of Indian authorities, the Chicago-based manufacturer said in a statement. Air India said the crashed 737 was about 2 1/2 years old.
Both pilots were experienced and had flown into Mangalore together on May 17, Air India’s director for personnel, Anup Srivastava, told reporters in Mumbai May 22. The civil aviation ministry said in a statement the plane had landed “slightly beyond” the runway’s “touchdown” zone at a time when visibility was about six kilometers (four miles).
Both the pilots were “well rested” before the flight, Air India Chairman and Managing Director Arvind Jadhav said yesterday in Mangalore.
The crash on May 22 was the worst in India since a Saudi Arabian Airlines flight collided with a Kazakhstan Airlines jet in November, 1996, killing all 349 on board.
In the South Asian country’s last major air disaster, a Boeing 737-200 crashed into a residential area while approaching Patna airport in the eastern Bihar in July 2000.
International air travel has rebounded from last year’s slump as the global economy expanded. Indian airlines carried 16.82 million passengers between January and April this year, 22 percent more than a year earlier, according to the Civil Aviation Ministry.
--With assistance from Jay Shankar in Bangalore. Editors: Mark Williams, Stephen Foxwell.


To contact the reporters on this story: Vipin Nair in Mumbai at vnair12@bloomberg.net; Rakteem Katakey in New Delhi at rkatakey@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Neil Denslow at ndenslow@bloomberg.net


Air India Probe May Take Two Weeks to Unlock Fatal Crash Data - BusinessWeek
 
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AI needs to follow the safety procedures for international aviation plus the GOI rules that are in place. They violated both and the average Indian sufferrd.
 
Pilots are given special training to land on mangalore airport.... It was not a short runway either.... Pilot tried to increase thrust and Take off again as he landed late on to the runway
 
AI needs to follow the safety procedures for international aviation plus the GOI rules that are in place. They violated both and the average Indian sufferrd.

What are these rules that were violated ?
 
No rules violated, pilots were experinced, The runway in mangalore is perfectly alright. I am from mangalore. my house is 8 kms from the airport. I frequently use this airport. This airport is so beautiful , hitech and modern. I dont think they have such airports in Bangladesh and even Pakistan. My sources in the airport say that, pilot lands the aircrft much ahead on the runway. He realises he has very little length of runway to bring the aircaft to halt. then he tries to abort landing increase thrust to take off again. in the process he hits radar towers and the boundary wall. Breaks the wall and then falls down into the deep gorge, where it bursts into flame. So stop blaming Indias infrastructure. First see if you have the infrastructure or not.
 
One more propaganda... how come one air crash determine entire Indian infrastructure?? Accidents do happen man.... they happen everywhere everyday every minute due to some mistake... in some cases small mistakes takes lot of lives other day nothing happens.........
 
No rules violated, pilots were experinced, The runway in mangalore is perfectly alright. I am from mangalore. my house is 8 kms from the airport. I frequently use this airport. This airport is so beautiful , hitech and modern. I dont think they have such airports in Bangladesh and even Pakistan. My sources in the airport say that, pilot lands the aircrft much ahead on the runway. He realises he has very little length of runway to bring the aircaft to halt. then he tries to abort landing increase thrust to take off again. in the process he hits radar towers and the boundary wall. Breaks the wall and then falls down into the deep gorge, where it bursts into flame. So stop blaming Indias infrastructure. First see if you have the infrastructure or not.

Its pilot error..some claimed its tyres burst..but thrz no any evidence of any scratches on the runway !!
 
No rules violated, pilots were experinced, The runway in mangalore is perfectly alright. I am from mangalore. my house is 8 kms from the airport. I frequently use this airport. This airport is so beautiful , hitech and modern. I dont think they have such airports in Bangladesh and even Pakistan. My sources in the airport say that, pilot lands the aircrft much ahead on the runway. He realises he has very little length of runway to bring the aircaft to halt. then he tries to abort landing increase thrust to take off again. in the process he hits radar towers and the boundary wall. Breaks the wall and then falls down into the deep gorge, where it bursts into flame. So stop blaming Indias infrastructure. First see if you have the infrastructure or not.

If you have the skills to investigate large airliner crashes shouldn't you be joining the investigating team in Mangalore ? Those guys say they will need two weeks. Obviously they are not aware of your skills. You already found the cause of the crash while you are in Antigua simply based on your sources. You could save them a lot of time and efforts.
 
People and media just speculate, Mangalore being a second tier city has some pretty modern infrastructure. It did have an ILS and the pilot seemed to have acquired glide scope signals which should have landed his jet at the foot of the runway. Since the weather was calm and there was no sudden gain or loss of airspeed, the only logical reason I can think of (having taken pilot lessons myself), he must have come in faster, which could explain why his touch down was late.

However there are other reasons including calibration of the glide scope itself or the signals that his plane was sending, However you see it, with visibility very good, the pilot could have judged the situation and initiated a go around earlier. In my view it seems like he had his chances but they may have panicked in the very end.
 
If you have the skills to investigate large airliner crashes shouldn't you be joining the investigating team in Mangalore ? Those guys say they will need two weeks. Obviously they are not aware of your skills. You already found the cause of the crash while you are in Antigua simply based on your sources. You could save them a lot of time and efforts.

You bird brain, dont answer if you cant comprehend. By my sources i meant aviation experts who visited the crash site. Of course the investigation is on.The report of which will be official. I am a regular flier in this airport. And yes, I work in Antigua, and I am on vacation here in my hometown Mangaglore. Even the TV channels, news papers say the same thing.
 

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