THISDAY

NCAA to Travellers: Expect Flight Delays During Yuletide

Aero resumes operations

- Chinedu Eze

The Director General of the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Captain Musa Nuhu has urged air travellers to expect flight delays due to Harmattan haze as the yuletide draws nearer.

He, however, commended the nation’s oldest carrier, Aero Contractor­s, which he said has met all standard conditions to resume operation on December 5, 2022.

Nuhu explained that due to passenger surge during the yuletide, there would be high passenger traffic, noting however that at the same time, harmattan haze disrupts flights, hence the expected delays.

“Flight cancellati­ons can come from many reasons. I am not making excuses for any operator; sometimes, you have technical problem, weather and other disruption­s that affect the flight schedules and sometimes, the airlines too, their planning is not the best.

“So, we work with everybody. It is not just the airlines; the airlines are part of the eco-system in the airport. Whenever we have the

Yuletide, we are going to have surge in passenger traffic that may be beyond the terminal capacity.

“That one also has an impact on the departure of an airline. Sometimes, the handlers are overloaded because of the loads. It will have an impact on the plan of the airline. So, we are doing our best to mitigate the challenges,” he said.

The Director General explained that Aero Contractor­s did not have any safety challenges and passed NCAA’s audit and therefore should resume flight operations.

“Aero Contractor­s was not grounded based on safety issues, we did an audit of them because whatever audit you do, you have findings and they were all minor findings.

“There was no Level 1, 2, 3 findings. They were very insignific­ant. We notified them. We audited them and we found out that the issue they had was finance sustainabi­lity.

“Aviation is safety sensitive and whenever you have financial difficulty, it is just a matter of time, you will not be able to comply with all the regulatory requiremen­ts and some may start cutting corners.

“So, before financial issues become safety issue, we had a discussion with them and they on their own before we took any action, agreed with our findings and suspended their operations to enable them reorganise and get some funding to get more equipment. That is what they have done.

“We sat with them, they submitted, we asked for projection, which they did, we reviewed. The first one wasn’t good enough, they had to go and review it and it was quite satisfacto­ry.

“We had MoU with them for payment of outstandin­g 5 per cent on Ticket Sales Charge (TSC). So, they are fine. As far as we are concerned, they can resume operations,” he said.

Nuhu also reiterated that Nigeria’s airspace was safe. This, he said was due to the seriousnes­s with which the regulatory agency applies in ensuring compliance to all regulatory requiremen­ts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria