Salient
features of the Policy
i.
The
Viability Gap Funding (VGF) will be funded by a small levy per departure on all
domestic routes other than Cat II/ Cat IIA routes, RCS routes and small
aircraft at a rate as decided by the Ministry from time to time. A detailed
scheme will be put up in the Public domain for stakeholders consultations.
ii.
The
5/20 rule for commencement of international flight in operation since 2004 is replaced
by a formulation which provides a level playing field and allows airlines, both
new and old, to commence international operations provided they continue to
meet some obligation for domestic operation. All airlines can commence
international operations provided 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.
iii.
Necessary
administrative and financial flexibility will be provided to Director General
of Civil Aviation (DGCA) for an effective aviation safety oversight system and
for creating a transparent single-window system for all aviation safety related
issues.
iv.
The
Route Dispersal Guidelines (RDG) have been rationalised by making
the criteria for declaring a route as Category I (trunk route) more
transparent, while the traffic to be deployed on Cat II and IIA expressed in
terms of a percentage of CAT I traffic remains the same. The criteria proposed
for a Cat I route are a flying distance of more than 700 km, average seat
factor of more than 70% and annual traffic of 5 lakh passengers. The percentage
for CAT III will be reduced in view of the Regional Connectivity Scheme coming
into operation. Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh have been included as part of
category II routes.
v.
The
regime of bilateral rights and code share agreements will be liberalised
leading to greater ease of doing business and wider choice to passengers. “Open
skies” will be implemented on a reciprocal basis for SAARC countries and
countries beyond 5000 kms from Delhi. A method will be recommended by a
Committee headed by the Cabinet Secretary for the allotment of additional
capacity entitlements wherever designated Indian carriers have not utilised 80%
of their bilateral rights but the foreign airlines/countries have utilised
their part and are pressing for increase in the capacity.
vi.
The
Ministry will continue to encourage development of airports by the State
Government or the private sector or in PPP mode and endeavour to provide
regulatory certainty. Future greenfield and brownfield airports will have cost
efficient functionality with no compromise on safety and security.
vii.
Airport
Authority of India (AAI) will continue to develop and modernise its airports
and upgrade quality of services. AAI will be suitably compensated in case a new
greenfield airport is approved in future within 150 km radius of an existing
operational AAI airport which is not yet saturated.
viii.
Upgradation
and modernisation of Air Navigation Services will continue in line with global
trends. AAI
will provide a fully harmonised Air Navigation System considering International
Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) Global Air Navigation Plan, Aviation system
Block Upgrade and modern performance based technologies and procedures.
ix.
The
Government will promote helicopter usage by issuing separate
regulations for helicopters and development of four heli-hubs initially. Ministry
of Civil Aviation will also coordinate with all the agencies and stakeholders
concerned to facilitate Helicopter Emergency Medical Services.
x.
In the budget for 2016-17, the customs
duty for MRO’s has been rationalised and the procedure for clearance of goods
simplified, in particular duty on tools and tool kits. Further incentives have
been 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.
xi.
The
existing ground handling policy is being replaced with a new framework to
ensure fair competition. 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 2008.
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. Hiring of employees through
manpower supplier will not be permitted.
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