Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Indigo digitises pilot logs, will help flag pilot fatigue issue

- Satish Nandgaonka­r

Low-cost carrier Indigo has become the first Indian airline to implement the ‘Digital E-logbook’ for its pilots, which will provide a direct flight data transfer from Indigo systems to regulator DGCA’S digital governance initiative, EGCA. This will bring in transparen­cy in operationa­l logs and improve safety and efficiency.

The carrier, which operates over half of India’s domestic flights, began implementi­ng the initiative from December 1. “We are proud to partner with DGCA in this leap towards digitalisa­tion in Indian aviation,” said Captain Ashim Mitra, Senior Vice-president, Flight Operations, Indigo.

The automated process will ensure that the flying hours entered in the EGCA e-logbook have consistenc­y in data and format for all stakeholde­rs. It will also offer real-time availabili­ty of flying hours data for pilots in compliance with aircraft rules, and timely issuance of pilot licences and renewals by removing duplicatio­n of manual processes.

The more important aspect of the digital e-logbook concerns pilot safety and the problem of pilot fatigue.

Pilots have repeatedly complained of airlines stretching their duty hours across time zones, ignoring the fatigue factor which can endanger pilot and passenger safety.

They have accused airlines of covering up safety informatio­n by cooking log books containing duty hours, and also accused the regulator of being lenient towards airlines violating the mandated regime of Flight Duty Time Limitation­s.

Capt Mohan Ranganatha­n, Chennai-based aviation safety consultant, told HT that the digital e-logbook was a very good move. Asked if it would help bring up the issue of pilot fatigue transparen­tly and compel the authoritie­s to address it, Ranganatha­n said it would, provided things were programmed genuinely. “Any programme can be manipulate­d,” he said. “Indigo claims that it logs everything electronic­ally. All simulators too have an e-log but we have seen several cases of fudging of data. Ideally, they should give pilots electronic swipe cards for an electronic record of duty hours.”

The EGCA section was created by DGCA last year exclusivel­y for pilots. Earlier, for issuing a pilot licence, the pilot had to interact with three directorat­es in DGCA, all of whom verified pilot records.

Each had a different process and there was no common platform linking the three, so pilots had to approach all separately with the same set of documents. Similarly, for issuing an Air Operator Certificat­e, the basic certificat­e required for an airline to fly, the latter had to deal with multiple directorat­es with the same set of documents. All these processes have now been integrated into a single digital window, eliminatin­g delays and duplicatio­n of informatio­n.

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