Following a spate of aviation accidents involving non-scheduled operators (NSOPs), the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has announced a series of enhanced safety measures aimed at improving oversight, accountability, and transparency in the sector.
The move comes in the wake of recent fatal incidents, including a Red Bird Airways air ambulance crash in Jharkhand on Monday, which killed all seven on board, and a January crash in Maharashtra’s Baramati involving a VSR Ventures aircraft, which claimed the lives of all passengers, including NCP leader Ajit Pawar.
Key Safety Concerns
A review of the past decade of NSOP operations highlighted the primary causes of accidents:
The regulator emphasised that safety must always take precedence over commercial interests, including charter commitments and VIP movements.
DGCA reaffirmed that pilots-in-command have the final authority to divert, delay, or cancel flights for safety reasons without facing commercial consequences.
New Measures for NSOPs
The DGCA’s new mandates include:
Phase-1 of a special DGCA safety audit of NSOPs is nearing completion, with Phase-2 scheduled for early March.
A physical safety workshop will follow the audits to align all operators with the new operational requirements.
The DGCA’s comprehensive approach aims to reduce accidents, improve operational transparency, and hold operators accountable, addressing a sector that has seen multiple recent tragedies, including in the high-risk Char Dham region.