Survey of AI’s 787 fleet found no major safety concern: DGCA

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Survey of AI's 787 fleet found no major safety issue: DGCA

NEW DELHI: The Directorate General of Civil Aviation Tuesday expressed “concern regarding recent maintenance-related issues” reported by Air India and directed the airline to concentrate on safety whereas “strengthen(ing) internal coordination across engineering, operations, ground handling units”.Since a major quantity of AI flights are being delayed or cancelled attributable to a number of components – airspace closures and plane scarcity attributable to technical points and 787 checks – inflicting passenger inconvenience, the regulator has requested AI to “ensure availability of adequate spares to mitigate delays resulting from such issues & adhere to regulations”.A DGCA crew led by DG Faiz Ahmed Kidwai summoned Tuesday a gathering with AI MD Campbell Wilson, director (flight operations) Captain Pankul Mathur, AI Express CEO Aloke Singh, and officers of each airways, which function over 1,000 home & worldwide flights every day, to “review operations amid increasing flights”, and to “review the operational robustness of the airlines and ensure continued compliance with safety and passenger service regulations”.In the six days between between final Thursday (when AI 171 crashed) and 6pm Tuesday, AI operated 462 flights on its wide-body fleet of Boeing 787s, B777s and Airbus A350s, whereas canceling 83 flights. Of these, the B787s (one of which crashed in Ahmedabad) operated 248, or 53.7%, of the lengthy hauls however accounted for nearly 80% (66) of these cancellations for a number of causes.In a press release after the assembly, DGCA mentioned: “Recent surveillance conducted on AI Boeing 787 fleet did not reveal any major safety concerns. The aircraft and associated maintenance systems were found to be compliant with the existing safety standards.”AI now has 33 B787s. “Of these, four are undergoing major checks. As of 3pm on July 17, 24 aircraft have completed the required check. An additional two are planned for completion on Tuesday, with one more scheduled for Wednesday. The remaining six include two that are grounded in Delhi. Checks on these two will be carried out post-declaration of serviceability and prior to their return to service. The remaining four aircraft under MRO (maintenance, repair, overhaul) will undergo mandated check prior to their release from their maintenance hangars,” the regulator mentioned.AI has been requested to implement “systematic and real-time defect reporting mechanism to ensure that operational and safety-critical departments get timely updates”.



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