Why Does International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) Want To Postpone The Safety Audit Of The Indian Aviation Sector ?

Why does International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) want to postpone the safety audit of the Indian aviation sector ?

Why does International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) want to postpone the safety audit of the Indian aviation sector ?

ICAO wants a postponement of the Audit on India !

 

Aviation safety watchdog, the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO), is slated to carry out a partial safety audit of the Indian aviation sector ‘in a few months’, a senior government official said. However there is uncertainty now !

 

“The audit was scheduled for June, but we sought postponement due to the severity of the second wave of COVID-19,” the official said.

 

The ICAO audits the aviation safety and aviation security oversight capacities of its 193 Member-States. These cover legislation, resources and other capacities which State governments establish to effectively implement the ICAO’s Standards and Recommended Practices (SARPs). There are eight audit areas which include aircraft operations, airworthiness of civil aircraft, aerodromes, air navigation services and accident and serious incident investigations, among others.

 

“We expect to improve our performance after the passage of the Aircraft (Amendment) Bill, 2020, which gives statutory powers to the Directorate General of Civil Aviation, the Bureau of Civil Aviation Security and the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau. We have also implemented the ICAO’s recommendation to make the DGCA the licensing authority for Air Traffic Control Officers,” the official added.

 

ICAO audits stresses at eight aspects of an aviation market, but in india's case , the UN agency will take up only five of them –
 

►Personnel licensing and training,
►Aircraft operations,
►airworthiness of aircraft
►Organisational Structure
►Legislative matters

 


 

Questions were raised over the DGCA’s safety oversight after the crash of an Air India Express plane in August-2020  that led to the death of 20 people, but the govt expects ratings to improve.
 

 

Previous Audits

 

The ICAO had carried out the Universal Safety Oversight Audit Programme for India in February 2018. The audit result showed that the country’s score declined to 57.44% from 65.82% earlier, placing India below Pakistan, Nepal and many other nations.

However, subsequently, the Civil Aviation Ministry and the aviation regulator DGCA took corrective steps, following which the score improved to 74.


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