logo
Air India crash a safety wake-up call for aviation industry, says Airbus

Air India crash a safety wake-up call for aviation industry, says Airbus

The crash of an Air India 787 Dreamliner on Thursday killed more than 240 people on the aircraft as well as people in the densely populated urban area where the plane exploded
Bloomberg
Airbus SE said the fatal accident on Thursday in India involving a Boeing Co. airliner should spur the industry as a whole to advance its safety culture, dismissing the notion that the crash could bring a competitive edge to one planemaker over the other in the global duopoly.
'Safety is in everything that we do, so the tragedy in India, we don't see that in any way, shape or form as a competitive input,' Christian Scherer, who oversees Airbus's commercial aircraft operation, said at a press meeting in Paris. 'It is, if anything, a reminder to us all that aviation has become so safe that, statistically speaking, every accident is totally unacceptable.'
The crash of an Air India 787 Dreamliner on Thursday killed more than 240 people on the aircraft as well as people in the densely populated urban area where the plane exploded. The episode has added to several high-profile incidents that have shaken confidence in the safety of flying in recent years, after the industry enjoyed a long phase of few crashes, including 2023 where there was not one fatal accident involving a large jetliner.
The cause of the crash, which ranks as the worst civil aviation disaster in more than a decade, remains unknown. For Boeing, the tragedy was the first time the company has lost a 787 model, one of its most popular aircraft. Airbus competes in that space with its A350 jetliner and the smaller A330neo plane.
Scherer spoke alongside Chief Executive Officer Guillaume Faury ahead of the Paris Air Show, which kicks off next week and marks the key annual gathering for the industry. Faury's counterpart at Boeing, Kelly Ortberg, has canceled his appearance at the event in order to help coordinate his company's response to the India tragedy.
Faury said the company still plans to ramp up output, but that the goal of doing so has become 'a little bit more difficult' as global volatility and supply-chain constraints persist. At the same time, the company reiterated its goal of delivering 820 aircraft to customers this year, and Scherer said there's a 'meaningful decline' in missing parts as the overall supply chain improves.
Chief Financial Officer Thomas Toepfer, who appeared alongside other executives at the event, said that given the continued volatility in the market, the company would be less inclined to consider buybacks as a financial tool for the time being.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

DGCA Serves 4 Notices To Air India For Over 29 Safety Violations: Minister
DGCA Serves 4 Notices To Air India For Over 29 Safety Violations: Minister

NDTV

time2 hours ago

  • NDTV

DGCA Serves 4 Notices To Air India For Over 29 Safety Violations: Minister

New Delhi: The government on Thursday said that the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) had issued four show-cause notices to Air India over 29 violations. These violations are addressed as per the Enforcement Policy and Procedure Manual of DGCA. A few instances of systematic issues were observed post-merger of Vistara and Air India, said Minister of State for Civil Aviation Murlidhar Mohol in a written reply to a question in Lok Sabha. "Systemic issues were due to the adoption of new software and systems. A compliance reply has been received from Air India," the minister informed. The DGCA carried out 171 regulatory audits from 2020 to June 2025 to ensure safety in India's civil aviation sector. In an earlier reply to a question in the Rajya Sabha, MoS Mohol informed that a total of two incidents of turbulence and 10 incidents of emergency landing due to technical snags have been reported since January 2024 apart from which Air India's Boeing aircraft VT-ANB on June 12, 2025, "declared MAYDAY and eventually met with an accident". The minister said that pilot training in India is governed by extant regulations as specified under various Civil Aviation Requirements (CAR) and operations circulars, which are in line with the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) and global best practices. The DGCA also ordered a new set of Comprehensive Special Audits to enhance safety following the jolt to the country's civil aviation sector in the wake of the tragic Air India crash in Ahmedabad. The audit framework covers the entire range of aviation entities, including scheduled and non-scheduled airlines, maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) organisations, flying training schools, air navigation service providers, airport operators, and ground handling agencies. The aviation regulator has made it clear that failure to comply with audit recommendations could attract penalties such as suspension of operations or even cancellation of licences in cases of violation of safety norms.

Air India, Air India Express Post Rs 9,568-Crore Loss Before Tax In Financial Year 2025
Air India, Air India Express Post Rs 9,568-Crore Loss Before Tax In Financial Year 2025

NDTV

time4 hours ago

  • NDTV

Air India, Air India Express Post Rs 9,568-Crore Loss Before Tax In Financial Year 2025

New Delhi: Air India and Air India Express together posted a loss before tax of Rs 9,568.4 crore in the financial year ended March 2025, according to the civil aviation ministry. In the last fiscal, Akasa Air and SpiceJet recorded a loss before tax of Rs 1,983.4 crore and Rs 58.1 crore, while IndiGo reported a profit before tax of Rs 7,587.5 crore. The figures were shared by Minister of State for Civil Aviation Murlidhar Mohol as part of a written reply to the Lok Sabha on Thursday. These are provisional figures. Tata Group-owned Air India had a loss before tax of Rs 3,890.2 crore while its low-cost arm Air India Express, which had been profitable for long, registered a loss of Rs 5,678.2 crore in 2024-25. Loss-making Air India and profitable Air India Express were acquired by Tata Group in January 2022. As per the data, the debt of Air India stood at Rs 26,879.6 crore while that of IndiGo touched Rs 67,088.4 crore. The debt of Air India Express, Akasa Air, and SpiceJet stood at Rs 617.5 crore, Rs 78.5 crore, and Rs 886 crore, respectively, the data showed. "With the repeal of Air Corporation Act in March 1994, the Indian domestic aviation has been deregulated. The financial and operational decisions, including resource mobilisation and debt restructuring, are managed by the respective airlines based on commercial considerations," Mohol said in the written reply.

DGCA issued 4 show-cause notices to Air India over 29 violations
DGCA issued 4 show-cause notices to Air India over 29 violations

Time of India

time8 hours ago

  • Time of India

DGCA issued 4 show-cause notices to Air India over 29 violations

Advt The government on Thursday said that the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) had issued four show-cause notices to Air India over 29 violations are addressed as per the Enforcement Policy and Procedure Manual of DGCA.A few instances of systematic issues were observed post-merger of Vistara and Air India, said Minister of State for Civil Aviation Murlidhar Mohol in a written reply to a question in Lok Sabha."Systemic issues were due to the adoption of new software and systems. A compliance reply has been received from Air India," the minister DGCA carried out 171 regulatory audits from 2020 to June 2025 to ensure safety in India's civil aviation an earlier reply to a question in the Rajya Sabha, MoS Mohol informed that a total of two incidents of turbulence and 10 incidents of emergency landing due to technical snags have been reported since January 2024 apart from which Air India's Boeing aircraft VT-ANB on June 12, 2025, "declared MAYDAY and eventually met with an accident".The minister said that pilot training in India is governed by extant regulations as specified under various Civil Aviation Requirements (CAR) and operations circulars, which are in line with the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) and global best DGCA also ordered a new set of Comprehensive Special Audits to enhance safety following the jolt to the country's civil aviation sector in the wake of the tragic Air India crash in audit framework covers the entire range of aviation entities, including scheduled and non-scheduled airlines, maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) organisations, flying training schools, air navigation service providers, airport operators, and ground handling aviation regulator has made it clear that failure to comply with audit recommendations could attract penalties such as suspension of operations or even cancellation of licences in cases of violation of safety norms.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store