The
Minister of Civil Aviation Shri P. Ashok Gajapathi Raju released the National
Civil Aviation Policy 2016 in New Delhi today. This is the
first time since independence that an integrated Civil
Aviation Policy has been brought out by the Ministry. Speaking
on the occasion Shri Raju said that the centre-piece of the policy is to make
regional air connectivity a reality. He said that the policy aims to take flying to the masses by
making it affordable and convenient, establish an integrated eco-system which
will lead to significant growth of the civil aviation sector to promote
tourism, employment and balanced regional growth, enhance regional connectivity
through fiscal support and infrastructure development and enhance ease of
doing business through deregulation, simplified procedures and e-governance.
The policy is very comprehensive, covering 22 areas of the Civil Aviation
sector. Its salient features are as follows :
Regional Connectivity Scheme
·
This scheme will
come into effect in the second quarter of 2016-17
·
Airfare of about
Rs2500 per passenger for a one-hour flight
·
This will be
implemented by way of:
·
Revival of
airstrips/airports as No-Frills Airports at an indicative cost of Rs.50 crore
to Rs100 crore
·
Demand driven
selection of Airports/airstrips for revival in consultation with State Govts
and airlines
·
ViabilityGapFunding(VGF)toairlineoperators
·
RCS only in
those states which reduce VAT on ATF to 1% or less, provide other support
services and 20% of VGF
·
Concessions
by Stakeholders
·
There will be
no airport charges
·
Reduced Service
tax on tickets (on 10% of the taxable value) for 1 year initially
·
Reduced
Excise duty at 2% on ATF picked at RCS airports
·
State
government will provide police and fire services free of cost. Power, water
and other utilities at concessional rates
·
Creation of
Regional Connectivity fund for VGF through a small levy per departure on all
domestic flights other than Cat II/ Cat IIA routes, RCS routes and small
aircraft below 80 seats at a rate as decided bythe Ministry from time to time
·
VGF to be
shared between MoCA and State Governments in the ratio of 80:20. For the North
Eastern States, the ratio is 90:10
Route Dispersal Guidelines (RDG)
·
Category I to
be rationalized based on a transparent criteria, i.e., flying distance of more
than 700km, average seat factor of 70% and above and annual traffic of 5 lakh
passengers
·
The
percentage of Cat.I traffic to be deployed on Cat.II, and IIA will remain the
same while for CATIII it will be 35%. Routes to Uttarakhand and Himachal
Pradesh included in Category II
·
Revised
categorization to apply from winter schedule of 2017
·
There view of
routes will be done by MoCA once every5 years
·
Withdrawal or
revision of domestic operations to and within North East Region etc, subject to
full compliance of RDG, can be done under prior intimation to MoCA at least
three months before withdrawal or revision of the service
5/20 Requirement
5/20 Requirement
·
Replaced with
a scheme which provides a level playing field
·
All airlines
can now commence international operations provided that they deploy 20 aircraft
or 20% of total capacity (in term of average number of seats on all departures
put together), whichever is higher for domestic operations
Bilateral Traffic Rights
·
GoI
will enter into 'Open Sky' ASA on a reciprocal basis with SAARC countries and countries located beyond 5000 km from Delhi
·
For countries within 5000 km radius, where the Indian carriers have not utilised 80% of their capacity entitlements but foreign carriers /countries have utilised their bilateral rights, a method will be recommended by a Committee headed by Cabinet Secretary for the allotment of additional capacity entitlements
·
Whenever designated carriers of India have utilised 80% their capacity
entitlements, the same will be renegotiated in
the usual manner.
Ground Handling
Policy
·
The Ground Handling Policy/ Instructions/Regulations
will be replaced by a new framework:
· The airport operator will ensure that there will be three Ground Handling Agencies (GHA) including Air India's subsidiary/JV at all major airports as defined in AERA
Act
· At non-major airports, the airport operator to decide on
the number of ground handling agencies, based on the traffic output, airside and terminal building capacity
· All
domestic scheduled airline operators including helicopter operators will be
free to carry out self-handling at all airports through their regular employees
· Hiring
of employees through manpower supplier or contract
·
workers will not be permitted for security reasons
Airport
PPP/AAI
·
Encourage development of airports by AAI, State Governments, the private sector or in PPP mode
·
Future tariffs at all airports will be calculated on a
'hybrid till' basis, unless specified
otherwise in concession agreements. 30%
of non-aeronautical revenue will be used to cross- subsidise aeronautical charges
·
Increase non-aeronautical revenue by better utilisation of
commercial opportunities of city side land
·
AAI to be compensated in case a new greenfield airport is
approved in future within a 150 km radius of an existing unsaturated operational AAI airport (not applicable to civil enclaves)
Aviation Security, Immigration and customs
A
·
sMoCA will develop 'service delivery modules' for aviation
security, Immigration, Customs, quarantine officers etc in
consultations with respective Ministries/Departments
·
Allow Indian carriers to provide security services to
other domestic airlines subject to approval of BCAS
·
Encourage use of private security agencies at airports
for non- core security functions to be decided in consultation
with MHA
·
Such agencies should be registered under the Private
Security Agencies (Regulation) Act, 2005 and will also be
separately accredited by BCAS
·
Subject
to minimum benchmarks being met, security architecture at the different airports will be proportionate to the threat classification and traffic volume.
Helicopters and Charters I
·
Separate regulations for helicopters will be notified by
DGCA
after due stakeholder consultation
·
MoCA to coordinate with Govt agencies and other helicopter
operators to facilitate Helicopter Emergency Medical
Services
·
Helicopters will be free to fly from point to point
without prior ATC clearance in airspace below 5000 feet and areas other than
controlled or prohibited or restricted airspace
·
Airport charges for helicopter operations will be suitably
rationalized
·
The existing policy of allowing Inclusive tour package
charters will be further reviewed to include more categories of
passenger charter flights recognised globally.
Maintenance,
Repair and Overhaul
The MRO business of Indian carriers is around Rs 5000
crore, 90% of which is currently spent outside India. In the budget for 2016-17, customs duty has been
rationalised and the procedure for clearance
of goods simplified. Further incentives
proposed in the policy to give a push to this sector:
·
MoCA will persuade State Governments to make VAT zero- rated on MRO activities
·
Provision for adequate land for MRO service providers
will be made in all future airport/heliport projects where
potential for such MRO services exists
·
Airport royalty and additional charges will not be
levied on MRO service providers for a period of five years from the date of approval of the policy
Aviation
Education and Skill Building
Estimated
direct additional employment requirement of the Civil Aviation Sector by 2025 is about 3.3 lakh . All training in non licensed category will conform
to National Skill Qualification
Framework standards. MoCA will provide
full support to the Aviation Sector Skill Council and other similar organisations/agencies for imparting skills for the growing aviation industry
. There are nearly 8000 pilots holding CPL but who have not found any regular employment. MoCA will develop a scheme with budgetary support for Type- rating of
Pilots. The detailed scheme will be
worked out separately.
***
UM/RS