Thiruvananthapuram, Nov. 20:
Air India Charters Ltd’s maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) facility
here will soon have its own management team. Necessary sanctions have been
received in this connection, H.R. Jagannath, chief of engineering, told Business Line.
Set up on 6.07 hectares of land provided by the State Government in the
vicinity of the international airport terminal, the MRO was commissioned last
year.
It takes care of all engineering requirements of Boeing 737-800 aircraft
of Air India Express.
All engineering checks from transits up to the level of ‘C’ can be
undertaken here, which features a workshop, warehouse and office space spread
over 5,000 sq metres.
The facility will turn over a new leaf when it undergoes mandatory Director-General
of Civil Aviation (DGCA) audit for taking up the ‘C’ checks on aircraft.
DGCA CERTIFICATE
The resident DGCA official stationed at Kochi is expected to visit the
facility on Tuesday next to carry out the audit. Jagannath expects the DGCA certificate
to be available by the New Year, which would be a milestone achievement.
According to A.E. Sharma, who heads the quality wing, the MRO would
apply for European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) next year.
Even otherwise, it has been able to show a good account of itself thanks
largely to its captive clientele of Air India Express aircraft.
“We did not have to look around for business; on the contrary we have
benefited immensely from the experience of attending to three to four aircraft
every week,” Jagannath said. Quality of resources available, including
engineers and technicians, enables the facility to offer the ‘most competitive’
quotes, Jagannath said. It is looking to take up third party business in the
medium to long term, he added. But he is up against varied challenges on this
front. Foremost among them is the issue of high taxation of imported spares,
consumables and components, which tends to negate the ‘home advantage.’
The Government needs to urgently take up the issue so that MROs can turn
a highly profitable business by taking up third party business, Jagannath said.
BONDED STORE
Bonded store is another major requirement. This is a designated place
where components and materials for aircraft received from approved sources are
stocked.
Now these have to be flown in from Mumbai, Jagannath said. There are at
least 12,000 items of spares needed for an aircraft, said Sharma.
The MRO is also looking to establish joint ventures for backup shops to
outsource small unit repairs such as retreading of aircraft tyres, among
others.
Interested parties may invest their own funds to set up these shops near
the MRO, Jagannath said.
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