Pilots Association Urges DGCA to Fully Implement FDTL Rules to Combat Fatigue

The Airline Pilots' Association of India (ALPA India) has written to the DGCA raising concerns over pilot fatigue and recent pilot deaths. The letter highlights that continued deferment of the court-mandated Flight Duty Time Limitations (FDTL) framework is undermining flight safety. ALPA India states that variations granted to operators, originally meant as transitional measures, have become the norm, diluting fatigue management. The association urges the DGCA to implement a structured, time-bound plan for full FDTL implementation across all operators.

Key Points: Pilots Seek Urgent FDTL Rollout to Address Fatigue Concerns

  • ALPA India raises concerns over pilot fatigue and recent deaths
  • Full implementation of court-mandated FDTL framework deferred
  • Variations to FDTL rules have become the norm, diluting safety buffers
  • Association urges DGCA to create a roadmap for phased withdrawal of variations
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Pilots Association raises concerns on pilot fatigue, seeks urgent FDTL rollout by DGCA

ALPA India writes to DGCA, citing pilot deaths and safety risks from delayed FDTL implementation. Urges phased withdrawal of variations to flight duty rules.

"These variations, originally conceived as transitional measures, have effectively become the norm. This defeats the purpose of fatigue management framework - ALPA India"

Bengaluru, May 1

The Airline Pilots' Association of India on Friday wrote a letter to Directorate General of Civil Aviation raising concerns in view of the deferment of the full implementation of the Court-mandated Flight Duty Time Limitations framework.

In its letter, ALPA India said it was "placing on record a set of concerns that bear directly on flight safety, regulatory credibility, and the well-being of flight crew," particularly in view of recent deaths of pilots reported this week. The association said these issues arise from the ongoing deferment of the FDTL framework, despite prior representations on the matter.

"We write to place on record a set of concerns that bear directly on flight safety, regulatory credibility, and the well-being of flight crew especially in view of recent death of pilots in this week. These issues arise in the context of the Court mandated Flight Duty Time Limitations (FDTL) framework and the continued deferment of its full implementation, as also highlighted in prior representations," the letter said.

The pilots' body further stated that the continued granting of variations to airline operators has significantly diluted the intent of FDTL regulations. It said these variations, originally introduced as transitional measures, have effectively become the norm, undermining the fatigue management framework and enabling scheduling practices that operate close to regulatory limits without sufficient safety buffers.

"At the outset, it is submitted that the continued grant of variations to operators has materially diluted the intent of the FDTL regulations. These variations, originally conceived as transitional measures, have effectively become the norm. This defeats the purpose of fatigue management framework and perpetuates scheduling practices that operate at or near regulatory limits without adequate safety buffers," said the ALPA.

In its representation, the association has urged the DGCA to initiate a structured and time-bound plan for the phased withdrawal of such variations. It has called for a clearly defined roadmap leading to full and uniform implementation of FDTL provisions across all operators.

"At the outset, it is submitted that the continued grant of variations to operators has materially diluted the intent of the FDTL regulations. These variations, originally conceived as transitional measures, have effectively become the norm. This defeats the purpose of fatigue management framework and perpetuates scheduling practices that operate at or near regulatory limits without adequate safety buffers," said the ALPA.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

J
James A
It's shocking that airlines keep getting regulatory waivers to avoid fatigue rules. Passengers have no idea how tired pilots often are. My cousin is a pilot and says he's done 4 back-to-back red-eye flights with just 8 hours off. This is a safety time bomb.
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Priya S
As a frequent flyer, this is concerning. But let's be honest - airlines prioritise profits over people. DGCA should stop giving variations and implement FDTL uniformly. At least ALPA is speaking up for pilot wellbeing.
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Michael C
'Variations have become the norm' - that line says it all. Our regulator needs spine. These pilots aren't asking for luxury; just basic rest. Imagine driving a car for 16 hours straight - that's what these crew face while responsible for 300+ lives. 😡
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Vikram M
Honestly, Indian aviation needs a reality check. While other countries have strict FDTL, we keep deferring. The recent pilot deaths should be a wake-up call for DGCA. Hope they act before another tragedy happens.
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Sarah B
I'm a flight attendant and can confirm this is real. Pilots are exhausted after long hauls. ALPA is right to demand DGCA stop diluting rules with these temporary variations. Passengers deserve rested pilots. Safety isn't negotiable.

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