India jumps to 48th place in ICAO aviation safety ranking; Here's what it means

Updated : Dec 07, 2022 08:14
|
Editorji News Desk

India has jumped to the 48th position in the global aviation safety ranking by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), according to DGCA officials.

Four years ago, the country was ranked at the 102nd position.

In the ranking, Singapore is at the top, followed by the UAE and South Korea at the second and third positions, respectively, the officials said.

China is at the 49th place, they added.

Under its Universal Safety Oversight Audit Programme (USOAP) Continuous Monitoring Approach, an ICAO Coordinated Validation Mission (ICVM) was undertaken from November 9 to 16.

On Saturday, DGCA chief Arun Kumar told PTI that the regulator has worked tirelessly to upgrade India's safety ranking and the results are there. "Hopefully, we continue to remain vigilant and improve further".

The country's score in terms of effective implementation of key safety elements has improved to 85.49 per cent, the officials said.

On November 16, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) said the audit was conducted in the areas of legislation, organisation, personal licensing, operations, airworthiness and aerodromes.

"As per the initial reports, the mission was highly successful. India has done extremely well and our scores will see a substantial improvement putting us in the company of nations with best safety standards and oversight systems," it had said in a release.

Aviation MinisteraviationAviation Ministry

Recommended For You

editorji | Business

India revamps tax regime in 2025, new I-T Act to take effect from April 1

editorji | Business

New Zealand commits USD 20 bn investment in India under FTA in 15 yrs; on lines of EFTA pact

editorji | Business

India, New Zealand conclude FTA talks; pact to offer duty-free access, USD 20 bn FDI

editorji | Business

FTA with New Zealand to significantly deepen bilateral economic engagement: Govt

editorji | Business

Rupee breaches 91-mark against US dollar for first time in intra-day trade