Patel blames heavy fog for flight delays
December 27th, 2010 - 4:57 pm ICT by IANSMumbai/New Delhi, Dec 27 (IANS) Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel Monday blamed the heavy fog over the national capital for flight delays and said that the authorities had managed to handle the situation well.He said that the delays were due to the heavy fog which decreased the visibility below 50 metres, as a result of which even state-of-the-art ILS CAT-III B wasn’t effective.
“Flights cannot operate if the visibility is less than 50 metres,” Patel told reporters in Mumbai.
On Sunday, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) imposed curbs on aircraft not equipped to land in runway visibility as low as 50 metres.
“No aircraft which is non-compliant with CAT-IIIB will be coming to Delhi during low visibility conditions,” Civil Aviation Secretary Naseem Zaidi said in New Delhi.
“We have taken the step that aircraft which are not compliant with the CAT-IIIB will follow a separate fog schedule. These aircraft will be allowed to land only after 10 a.m,” he added.
According to a Delhi International Airport Limited (DIAL) official, the technologically superior ILS CAT-IIIB allows compliant aircraft and trained pilots to land even when the runway visibility is just 50 metres.
Despite the new measures on Monday, several flights and trains were disrupted for the second consecutive day as fog enveloped the national capital, leaving a large number of passengers stranded.
The fog, which descended upon the Indira Gandhi International Airport Sunday evening, forced the authorities to enforce the Low Visibility Procedures (LVP), due to which 16 domestic and seven international flights were diverted, while 26 flights were canceled.
“IGI flight operations have been affected by heavy fog. LVP were enforced from 2036 hours yesterday, and terminated at 1036 hours today,” a Delhi International Airport Limited (DIAL) official said Monday.
According to the officical, despite heavy fog cover, 257 flights operated under various instrument landing systems that assist in flight operations during poor visibility.
Delhi saw the first heavy fog of this season Saturday, resulting in a massive disruption of flight services. On Sunday too the condition remained the same, with as many as 38 flights being cancelled and 42 diverted. These included both domestic and international flights.
The services resumed by afternoon, while the stranded passengers were exasperated and agitated by the lack of information and cooperation from the authorities
- Curbs on aircraft to check flight delays in Delhi (Lead) - Dec 27, 2010
- New rules to mitigate fog-related flight disruptions - Dec 26, 2010
- Heavy fog delays flights at IGI airport (Lead) - Dec 25, 2010
- Heavy fog delays flights at IGI (Second Lead) - Dec 25, 2010
- Heavy fog delays many flights at Delhi airport - Dec 25, 2010
- Fog hits Delhi, disrupts flights, trains (Second Lead) - Dec 26, 2010
- Delhi airport gears to tackle foggy winter - Dec 20, 2011
- One flight diverted from Delhi airport due to fog (Second Lead) - Jan 08, 2011
- One flight diverted from Delhi airport due to fog (Lead, superseding earlier) - Jan 08, 2011
- Heavy fog hit hard air, rail traffic (Evening Lead) - Dec 27, 2010
- Capital shivers, fog disrupts trains, flights (Third Lead) - Dec 19, 2011
- Govt. allows flight movements in reduced visibility, changes rules - Dec 26, 2010
- No flight cancelled at Delhi airport due to fog - Dec 29, 2010
- Fog disrupts flight operations at Delhi airport (Lead) - Feb 17, 2011
- Delhi airport ready for foggy days - Dec 16, 2010
Tags: cat iii, civil aviation, compliant, curbs, delhi international, dgca, directorate general, flight delays, flight operations, fog, indira gandhi, indira gandhi international airport, instrument landing systems, international flights, naseem, New Delhi, praful patel, sunday evening, visibility conditions, zaidi