Business Standard

11 Airbus neos grounded, affects IndiGo, GoAir flights

Faulty Pratt & Whitney engines were leading to mid-air shutdowns

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER New Delhi, 12 March

Indian aviation regulator DGCA on Monday grounded 11 Air bus A320neo aircraft due to recurring engine malfunctio­n. Of the 11aircraft, eight belong to In di Go and three to Go Air. The mal function has occurred with a certain sub-population of engines manufactur­ed by Pratt& Whitney.

The problem stems from a component in the engine that can show early signs of wear, an dislocated in an area that must with stand high pressure.

Citing safety of aircraft operations, the DG CA said ,“A 320 ne os fitted with Pratt& Whitney 1100 engines beyond ES N 450 have been grounded with immediate effect .’’ Both In di Go and Go Air have been asked to re fit these aircraft with spare engines. The latest decision follows a warning issued by the European aviation safety regulator, EASA, in February, related to the particular type of engine. In its directive, the EA SA had said all aircraft that had both engines of the same type should be grounded immediatel­y. Also, aircraft with single engine of this type should not do long-range operations, the EASA had said. Afterthat, IndiGo had grounded three planes.

In the mean time, three incidents of engine shutdown were reported to the regulator—the latest one occurred in Ahmed a bad on Monday when an In di Go aircraft with 186 passengers was forced to make an emergency landing after mid-air engine failure.

The DGCA said following the EASA direction, it held meetings with Airbus and Pratt & Whitney and asked them for a solution. The manufactur­er could not provide a concrete solution, the DGCA said. Pratt & Whitney in its latest communicat­ion also could not offer a firm commitment on when the engine issue would be resolved. “There is no concrete proposal at this stage to address the issue,” the DGCA said.

With the grounding of 14 aircraft so far related to the engine snag, the airlines will be forced to cancel a few flights. While the airlines did not provide numbers, sources said that around 90 flights would be cancelled due to the disruption. IndiGo said it would accommodat­e passengers in other aircraft.

“We apologise to the affected passengers. They will be accommodat­ed on other flights on our network,” an IndiGo spokespers­on said. “We are altering flight schedules and communicat­ing the new schedules to those affected by last-minute changes, we are making all possible arrangemen­ts to minimise the impact,” a GoAir spokespers­on said.

Analysts pointed out the disruption would have an effect on IndiGo’s finances as it would be forced to go in for short-term lease of aircraft to maintain target capacity induction. Short-term leases are expensive and their maintenanc­e cost of such aircraft is also higher than that of new one. Airbus has already stopped delivery of the A320 neo model fitted with Pratt & Whitney engines.

“The problem could become much bigger if the engine supplier cannot find a quick fix as the delivery schedule of future A320 neo could be affected,” said Ansuman Deb of ICICI Securities in a research report.

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