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    Home » Air India admits compliance culture needs overhaul after flying Airbus without permit
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    Air India admits compliance culture needs overhaul after flying Airbus without permit

    Arabian Media staffBy Arabian Media staffDecember 10, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Air India admits compliance culture needs overhaul after flying Airbus without permit

    Image credit: Getty Images

    An Air India investigation into why one of its Airbus planes conducted eight commercial flights without an airworthiness permit found “systemic failures”, with the airline admitting it needed to do better on compliance, a company document showed.

    An Airbus A320 flew passengers between New Delhi, Bengaluru, Mumbai and Hyderabad on November 24 to 25 without the mandatory Airworthiness Review Certificate, or ARC, a key permit issued annually by the regulator after a plane passes safety and compliance checks, according to the document.

    Air India found engineers and pilots had failed to check the aircraft’s documents and that changes were needed to bolster compliance protocols, it said.

    Read more-Air India crash: How will it challenge the airline’s ‘world class’ ambitions

    “Critical information was not shared with all relevant stakeholders, and opportunities for timely intervention were missed,” said the internal investigation report, which was reviewed by Reuters.

    “The incident highlights the need for urgent improvements in process discipline, communication, and compliance culture,” added the report, which was dated December 6.

    The findings, with a cover letter signed by COO Captain Basil Kwauk, have been submitted to Indian aviation authorities, but have not been made public.

    The report is a stark admission from an airline that suffered its worst disaster when a Boeing Dreamliner crashed moments after take-off in June killing 260 people. Air India has also received warnings from the watchdog for running planes without checking emergency equipment, not changing engine parts on time and forging records to show compliance, as well as other audit lapses.

    Air India last week called the Airbus November incident “regrettable” and said that some people had been suspended, while India’s civil aviation watchdog, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), ordered the aircraft to be grounded and called for an investigation.

    Air India, which is owned by India’s Tata Group and Singapore Airlines, said in a statement to Reuters it had proactively reported the incident to the DGCA and had “implemented immediate measures to prevent similar instances”, adding it would continue to strengthen its compliance systems.

    The DGCA and Airbus did not respond to Reuters’ requests for comment.

    Pilots warned to be careful

    India’s aviation sector is going through a tumultuous phase. Market leader IndiGo last week cancelled thousands of flights, disrupting air travel across the nation, and triggering debate over IndiGo and Air India’s grip on the sector with over 90 per cent market share between them.

    An ARC violation can attract a penalty of up to INR10m ($111,201).

    The certificate is issued annually for commercial aircraft after a comprehensive review and verification of their compliance with airworthiness standards, according to the DGCA.

    It is typically issued after DGCA officials conduct a physical inspection, which includes interior and exterior checks ranging from medical kits on board to tyre condition.

    Air India’s investigation found that the A320, registered as VT-TQN, flew eight passenger flights and one test flight with an expired ARC due to the “convergence of multiple latent organisational and process deficiencies”, the report said.

    It found both the plane’s engines were changed and it was released for the test flight on November 24 without the required special flight permit, because the aircraft maintenance engineer “failed to check the onboard documents”.

    Further checks on passenger flights were also missed, added the report, which was drafted after interviewing employees and reviewing internal evidence.

    The Air India investigation also blamed pilots, saying those who flew the eight flights did not comply with standard operating procedures before taking off.

    On December 1, Air India’s Director Flight Operations, Manish Uppal, reminded all pilots via an internal email to check paperwork before every flight, including navigation charts, cargo manifest and the ARC, the report said.

    “Non-adherence to company policy or SOPs will be viewed seriously and may attract action,” the email said.

    The Air India investigation report added the airline now aims to foster a compliance-focused culture, “where regulatory compliance is prioritised over operational expediency”.

     

     






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