BusinessLine (Delhi)

After HC order, DGCA starts processing deregistra­tion of Go First aircraft

- Forum Gandhi

The Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has started processing deregistra­tion of aircraft leased to Wadia-owned Go First following the Delhi High Court order.

According to sources, the aviation watchdog has already processed the deregistra­tion request of 43 aircraft, and is in the middle of processing the requests for the pending 11 aircraft. Banking sources said this paves the way for the airline’s downfall as lenders weigh liquidatio­n.

According to documents reviewed by businessli­ne, Bluesky 19 Leasing Ltd and Star Rising Aviation, both Dublin-based lessors, have requested to deregister and reclaim 11 aircraft leased to Go First. They made these requests using the Irrevocabl­e Deregistra­tion and Export Request Authorizat­ion (IDERA) provisions, as seen in filings on the DGCA website.

According to IDERA norms, in cases of lease rental defaults, regulators are obligated to deregister the aircraft and authorise lessors to repossess them within five working days of filing a request. This scenario implies that unless Go First secures legal relief, it faces the risk of losing over a third of its fleet within a week.

IDERA empowers lessors to deregister their aircraft from the registry of the lessee’s country, repossess them, and transport them out, particular­ly in cases of lease payment defaults.

AIRCRAFT LEASED

Both Blue Sky and Star Rising had leased AIRBUS A320-271N to Go First. Star Rising leased six aircraft with the registrati­on numbers VT-WJN, VT-WJP, VTWJR, VT-WJQ, VT-WJR, VT-WJQ. On the other hand, Blue Sky has leased five aircraft VT-WJJ, VTWJM, VT-WJT, VT-WJS and VT-WJL.

Both Bluesky 19 Leasing Ltd and Star Rising Aviation filed IDERA requests on May 9 and May 11, 2023, respective­ly. The National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) admitted Go First’s plea for voluntary insolvency on May 10, 2023. Go First’s Resolution Profession­al

argued against deregister­ing the aircraft, claiming they were essential for the airline’s revival, stating that the moratorium stalled the process of deregistra­tion for all 54 aircraft.

Multiple lessors including Pembroke Aviation, Accipiter Investment­s Aircraft 2, EOS Aviation, and SMBC Aviation then approached the Delhi High Court. These lessors petitioned the court seeking the return of planes leased to the financiall­ytroubled airline, contesting the DGCA’s delay in deregister­ing the aircraft.

After prolonged litigation, last week, the Delhi High Court ordered the DGCA to process deregistra­tion requests within five days. .

businessli­ne had reported that the lenders were mulling liquidatio­n of the airline. Sources said the recent order would now hasten the process further .

 ?? ?? ALL SET. Banking sources said this paves the way for the airline’s downfall as lenders weigh liquidatio­n
ALL SET. Banking sources said this paves the way for the airline’s downfall as lenders weigh liquidatio­n

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