Pilot
training at flying schools across the country has been hit over the last four
weeks due to non-availability of certified aviation gasoline or Avgas.
While
commercial aircraft rely on aviation turbine fuel, around 80-90 per cent of the trainer aircraft in India use Avgas,
which is produced by Indian Oil Corporation (IOC).
IOC tests
the product for its performance at an overseas laboratory. A delay in
certification has held up the supplies. Flying schools, however, are not
convinced by the refiner's claims and fear that supply disruption could slow down pilot production.
"For
past month, Avgas supply is around tenth of our requirement. Consequently, our
flying has declined to 10-20 per cent of the normal. In fact, on Saturday
we gave a day off to conserve limited stock. The months of April-May are fair
weather season across the country. If the disruption continues for longer,
students would be badly hit as flying halves during the monsoon months,"
said Jati Dhillon, Managing Director of Government Aviation Training Institute,
Odisha.
The
association has sought Civil Aviation Ministry's intervention in the issue and
suspects that supply shortage was caused due to exports. An IOC executive
denied this and said the company always
meets domestic demand first before exporting products.
Prior to September 2022, all the Avgas
consumed in the country was imported from Europe. IOC began producing it from its
Vadodara refinery as a part of an initiative to reduce dependence on imports.
Local production is now taking care of domestic requirement.
"There are around 220 trainer
aircraft in the country with flying schools across the country and nearly 80-90
per cent of them run on Avgas. While some larger schools keep buffer stocks
even those would be close to exhaustion. Thus, the impact of supply disruption
will be felt across the board," said Hemanth DP, CEO of Asia Pacific
Flight Training Academy.
There are
34 DGCA-approved flying training schools in the country operating at 55 bases.
Last year, DGCA issued a record 1,562 commercial pilot licences to domestically
trained pilots and those to trained overseas.
In a
statement, IOC said there is no disruption in Avgas production. “Before
supplying it to our customers one final test is done in a foreign laboratory. We are awaiting the certification
report. We expect to receive it in coming week. We have sufficient
stock of Avgas at our refinery and
normal supplies can resume immediately once we receive the certification,” IOC
said