THISDAY

FAA Upgrades India’s Aviation Safety Rating

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The US FAA has upgraded India’s aviation safety rating in a boost for Indian airlines which can now increase the number of flights they operate to the United States.

US Transporta­tion Secretary Anthony Foxx said that India had taken corrective action to address the Federal Aviation Administra­tion’s concerns, after the regulator downgraded India’s rating to category 2 from category 1 in January last year, citing a lack of safety oversight.

Reuters reported that the decision, which takes the rating back to category 1, was expected as Indian aviation authoritie­s had said they were working hard to win back the higher rating.

Foxx did not specify the action India had taken but a person with knowledge of the decision said authoritie­s had recruited more flight operations inspectors and streamline­d some procedures to improve safety.

The upgraded rating is expected to help Jet Airways and state-owned Air India, the two Indian airlines which currently fly to the United States. The downgrade had meant both carriers could not increase flights to the country and faced extra checks for existing ones.

“The United States Government commends the Government of India for taking corrective action to address the safety oversight issues identified during the IASA (Internatio­nal Aviation Safety Assessment) process,” Foxx said in a statement after meeting India’s civil aviation minister in Delhi.

India first achieved a category 1 rating in 1997.

Air travel in India is growing rapidly as more people fly abroad for the first time, although not as fast as the domestic market where low-cost carriers dominate.

Internatio­nal passenger numbers to and from India grew 6.9 percent in 2013-14 to 43 million, official data showed, down from the double-digit growth in traffic seen before 2012.

Vistara, India’s newest airline, said last week it plans to start flying overseas ahead of an expected change in rules that would allow new carriers to operate abroad.

The FAA’s decision comes amid heightened recent scrutiny on aviation safety in Asia. South Korea, Japan and China last month stopped Thailand-based airlines from flying charters and new routes because of safety concerns highlighte­d by an internatio­nal audit. The restrictio­ns, though, have been selectivel­y relaxed.

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