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Can Dedicated Medical Travel Corridors Be the Future of the Medical Tourism Industry?

By Rajeev Taneja, Founder, GlobalCare Health Medical tourism is rapidly evolving into a more connected, patient-centric healthcare ecosystem where continuity of care, coordinated support systems, and cross-border collaboration matter as much as clinical excellence itself. According to Future Market Insights, the global medical tourism market is projected to grow from USD 312.5 billion in 2026 to nearly USD 1000.2 billion by 2036, registering a CAGR of 12.3%. This rapid expansion is shifting the conversation from treatment access alone to how healthcare systems can build structured pathways that support patients throughout their entire medical journey. With a rapidly growing global medical tourism industry, the conversation is shifting from treatment access to treatments but more about how healthcare systems can create structured pathways for patients to follow during their entire medical process. This is where medical travel corridors are emerging as a significant concept in the global healthcare delivery system. These corridors function as structured healthcare partnerships between countries, hospitals, facilitators, insurers, and travel authorities. The aim is to simplify the patient journey through coordinated systems that support everything from medical visas and treatment planning to recovery and follow-up care. Instead of patients navigating fragmented systems independently, medical travel corridors create a more seamless and organised healthcare experience. Earlier, medical tourism focused on enabling patients to travel internationally for specialised procedures, lower treatment costs, or faster access to healthcare services. However, despite advancements in hospital infrastructure and medical expertise, the ecosystem has often remained fragmented. The patient often manages multiple service providers, visas, travel, accommodation, medical records and post-treatment follow-ups independently, an experience overwhelming for them both emotionally and logistically. The future will largely be determined by whether healthcare ecosystems can provide continuity of treatment as healthcare becomes seamless. Today, patients demand more from their experiences than merely being able to undergo surgical procedures or see specialists. They expect guidance, transparency, emotional reassurance, and coordinated support before, during, and post-treatment. This is particularly pertinent across high-growth medical tourism destinations, including India, South-east Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, as the cross-border healthcare demand remains. Markets are growing more interconnected, necessitating closer regional healthcare cooperation. Such developments encompass enhanced referral networks, synchronized hospital collaborations, patient support in different languages, telemedicine consultation, integrated patient health records and arranged post-treatment follow-ups. Technology is turning out to be one of the most effective tools in facilitating this process. Telemedicine platforms, virtual consultations, diagnosis through artificial intelligence, Tele-ICU support systems, and doctor-to-doctor collaboration networks aid health organizations in organizing treatment plans across borders effectively. Patients can now begin consultations, second opinion services, and follow-ups even after returning home without any break in communication. The increasing use of digital health care and medical tourism will drive it towards a more integrative and patient-centric healthcare ecosystem approach, rather than just focusing on one-off services to the tourists. The emphasis will now be on creating healthcare experiences for their patients before, during, and even after the procedures. This is due to the fact that there are some challenges in the field of healthcare that cannot be met by one healthcare institution alone. There will be a need for collaborations in the industry if its future is to be bright. Dedicated medical travel corridors can also play a significant role in improving trust and accessibility in healthcare. Faster medical visa processes, coordinated airport support, culturally sensitive patient services, and structured recovery planning can make international treatment far less intimidating for patients and families. This kind of collaboration is now very necessary, since there is nothing one entity can do to solve all the issues associated with global healthcare on their own. Future success in medical tourism will be dependent on strategic partnerships that ensure information sharing and coordinated patient care. The creation of medical travel corridors will be essential in building trust between different health care entities. Faster medical visas, assistance at airports, cultural competence among the staff handling the patients, and recovery plans will go a long way in making international medicine less frightening for the patients and their loved ones. Ultimately, the way forward for the field of medical tourism will depend on how effectively healthcare systems can create seamless, coordinated, and patient-centric care across borders. The development of medical travel corridors is the move towards such an integrated health-care environment.

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SriLankan Airlines adds Ahmedabad as its 10th destination in India

:- By Preeti Puja The airlines aim to enhance its presence into India alongwith growing network for transit operations from Colombo. Sri Lanka has always been a top destination for Indian travellers as its national carrier SriLankan Airlines has long made it a mission to bring India closer to Sri Lanka and the world. With close to 90 weekly flights between the two countries, and more to come, the airline has never been more energised about setting the pace for India’s expanding global footprint. For SriLankan, India is its largest market, accounting for nearly 30 per cent of the airline’s total passenger traffic and 23 per cent of overall visitor arrivals to the island. Building on this momentum, the SriLankan Airlines is poised to enhance its India operations in 2026 through targeted strategic initiatives which will strengthen its connectivity and reinforce the relation between the two nations. In the current year, SriLankan Airlines will increase its weekly India services and further start new direct flight to the tenth Indian destination at Ahmedabad. At present, the airlines operate direct flights to Chennai, Mumbai, Delhi, Hyderabad, Bengaluru, Kochi, Trivandrum, Madurai and Tiruchirappalli. With the addition of Ahmedabad, SriLankan Airlines will serve six of India’s eight major metropolitan hubs, further diversifying its India portfolio and boosting route economics by capitalising on year-round demand and strong cultural ties between the two countries. These initiatives are projected to increase Indian passenger traffic across the airline’s network by up to 12 per cent this year. SriLankan Airlines is also establishing itself as one of the top choice for transit flight options with around 30 per cent of Indian passengers had travelled further destinations via Colombo. The airline provides seamless connections between the cities it serves in India and the Middle East, the Maldives, the Far East, Europe and Australia through its own and code share services. Indian travellers account to approximately 40 per cent of total tourist arrivals to Sri Lanka, a contribution that is deeply significant to the national economy. SriLankan Airlines works closely with the Sri Lanka Tourism Promotion Bureau, Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority and other trade partners in supporting national tourism ambitions. Dimuthu Tennakoon, Head of Commercials, SriLankan Airlines, while addressing the media at a Delhi event highlighted that due to the geographical advantage we are so lucky to be positioned close to India. We operate 89 flights across nine destinations in India and this year we want to expand our operation with addition of Ahmedabad and further increase the frequency to the existing destinations. This new addition will be after five years and this is due to the result of lot of work we did on deciding which destination we should start. But finally, we decided that the most important city, right now for SriLankan would be none other than Vibrant Gujarat. Ahmedabad –Colombo Schedule Once the regulatory approval will be received, SriLankan Airlines will operate from Colombo to Ahmedabad with four frequencies a week. The aircraft to be used for this sector will be the Airbus A320 neo with two types of seat configuration, business and economy with flight timing of approx two hours. SriLankan Airlines has plans to increase frequencies to all the existing sectors into India and is expected once they receive the two new aircrafts with the first one expected in June 2026. At present, SriLankan has 23 aircraft in operational status which comprises of 10 wide-body and 13 narrow-body aircraft and with the new addition, it will have 25 aircraft in its fleet. Indian Tourist flow to SriLanka Sri Lanka has the largest tourist from India which accounts to 23 per cent and in numbers its 531,000 tourists arrivals with most number from Kerala. The rest of them around 30 per cent transit from India to Sri Lanka to countries like Australia, Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore. Many transit passengers also prefer SriLankan for travel to Indonesia and Korea. Establishing pre-Covid flight schedules Before the pandemic, SriLankan Airlines used to operate 125 weekly flights to India but now they operate only 90 weekly flights. However, they target to enhance the numbers up to 200 but to reach that goal, new aircraft will be required and that seems difficult to be achieved by 2028 -29. The SriLankan Airlines booking statistics shows that about 60 per cent of bookings by Indian passengers are made through indirect channels, including traditional trade partners and Online Travel Agents, while the remainder are made directly through SriLankan Airlines’ channels. As it expands its digital capabilities, SriLankan Airlines continues to nurture its trade partnerships, serving travellers across both channels pan India.

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Why Clients Rely on Air Charter Brokers: Expertise Beyond the Flight

Charter aviation is often chosen for reasons such as privacy, time-saving, and luxury – not only when scheduled travel becomes impractical. In these moments, clients are not simply booking an aircraft; they are seeking confidence that every aspect of the journey will be handled correctly from the outset. For many organisations across both established and emerging markets- where clients increasingly recognize the value brokers provide – the solution lies not in dealing directly with a single provider, but in working with an experienced air charter broker. Brokers play a critical, though often unseen, role by coordinating the entire journey and ensuring that every element of a charter flight stands up to operational and regulatory scrutiny. “Charter aviation is about far more than flying from A to B,” says Claudia Krajhanzl, Vice President of Passenger Charters for IMEA at Chapman Freeborn. “It requires a deep understanding of regulations, operational realities, and risk management, and passenger safety, especially when flights involve multiple jurisdictions or time‑critical missions.” Navigating complexity in the charter journey While charter flights can appear straightforward from the outside, each mission is built on a complex framework of approvals and decisions. Aircraft availability must align with route permissions, crew duty limitations, airport capabilities, insurance coverage, and local operating rules – many of which vary significantly from one country to another. Air charter brokers exist to manage this complexity on behalf of the client. Acting as an independent coordinator, brokers translate a client’s requirements into a viable flight solution, identify suitable operators and aircraft, and oversee the process from initial planning through to completion. “Our role is to look beyond availability and price,” Krajhanzl explains. “We assess whether a solution is operationally realistic, compliant with local regulations, and appropriate for the specific mission. That oversight is what helps prevent issues later on.” Compliance as a foundation, not a formality One of the key areas where established brokers differentiate themselves is compliance. In charter aviation, compliance is not a box‑ticking exercise – it is the foundation that protects clients, operators, and passengers alike. Before a flight is confirmed, brokers carry out thorough due diligence on potential operators. This typically includes verifying Air Operator Certificates (AOCs), reviewing insurance coverage, assessing operational approvals, assessing the airline’s financial stability, and confirming that flights will be conducted under the correct commercial framework. In regions where regulatory oversight may be inconsistent or evolving, this process becomes even more critical. “Regulated charter operations require constant attention to detail,” says Krajhanzl. “Experienced brokers understand how regulations are applied in practice, not just in theory, and ensure that every flight is set up correctly from the outset.” This structured approach helps clients avoid risks associated with non‑compliant or improperly authorised flights – risks that can arise when working with newly established or unregulated intermediaries. Rather than promoting shortcuts, brokers provide stability and accountability in an industry where the consequences of oversight can be significant. Value beyond the headline price Price is often the most visible element of a charter discussion, but it represents only part of the value an experienced broker brings. Access, flexibility, and informed guidance often prove far more important over the course of a mission. Brokers maintain extensive global networks of operators and aircraft types, enabling them to source practical solutions quickly and adapt when circumstances change. If an aircraft becomes unavailable due to maintenance, brokers can draw on alternative options without disrupting the wider operation. Equally important is advisory support. Brokers help clients understand trade‑offs between aircraft types, routes, and timelines, ensuring expectations are aligned with operational realities. “A well-planned charter is rarely transactional,” Krajhanzl notes. “Clients benefit most when they have a partner who can explain the options clearly and guide decisions based on experience, not assumptions.” Supporting operators through coordination Brokers and operators are not competitors within the charter ecosystem – they play complementary roles. Operators provide the aircraft, crews, and technical expertise required to conduct flights safely and efficiently. Brokers, in turn, support operators by delivering demand, managing client communication, and coordinating the broader framework around each flight, while applying their own technical expertise – including deep aviation knowledge, regulatory understanding, and operational coordination – to ensure each solution is robust, compliant, and operationally sound. By acting as a single point of contact, brokers help ensure that information flows smoothly between clients, operators, ground handlers, fuel suppliers, and where required, relevant authorities. This coordination is particularly valuable for multi‑sector flights or destinations with limited infrastructure. “When expectations, constraints, and responsibilities are clear from the beginning, operations tend to run far more smoothly,” says Krajhanzl. “That clarity benefits everyone involved.” Rethinking the role of the broker In some markets, brokers are still perceived as intermediaries focused primarily on margin. In reality, their long‑term value lies in expertise, continuity, and trust. Established brokers invest in compliance processes, market intelligence, and long‑term relationships with both clients and operators. Their value often becomes most apparent when circumstances change or challenges arise – moments when experience, adaptability, and problem‑solving are essential. “Ultimately, a broker’s role is about accountability,” Krajhanzl concludes. “Clients rely on us to deliver compliant, reliable solutions, particularly in complex markets. That long term commitment is what builds confidence and lasting partnerships in charter aviation.” (This feature & Pix is shared by Chapman Freeborn and it provides private air passenger and cargo charter services.Views expressed are personal.)

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Rebalancing the Skies: Building a Permanent Passenger Protection and Grievance Redressal Framework in Indian Aviation

Why regulatory clarity, pricing transparency, and institutional reform can no longer be deferred  Written By G.S.Bawa:  India’s aviation sector stands at a defining moment. Over the past decade, the transformation has been remarkable—air travel has expanded beyond metropolitan elites to become an essential mobility backbone for millions. With initiatives such as the UDAN Scheme, the skies have quite literally opened up to the “common citizen.” But with democratisation comes responsibility As more first-time flyers enter the system, their expectations are not shaped by legacy industry norms—they are shaped by fairness, predictability, and value. It is precisely here that recent developments—particularly the proposed “60% free seating” directive and its abrupt rollback—have exposed a deeper institutional weakness: the absence of a stable, transparent, and passenger-first grievance redressal architecture.This is not a short-term policy lapse. It is a long-term structural gap. When Policy Oscillates, Passenger Trust Declines Aviation systems thrive on predictability. Every operational and commercial decision—from scheduling to pricing—is built on stable assumptions. When a regulatory directive is issued and then quickly withdrawn without public clarification, it sends a signal of uncertainty.For passengers, this is more than confusion—it is erosion of trust. The lack of clarity surrounding the “free seating” proposal illustrates this problem vividly. Was the intention to eliminate seat selection fees? To introduce a randomised allocation system? Or to mandate partial standardisation across airlines? Without a clearly articulated rationale from the Directorate General of Civil Aviation or the Ministry of Civil Aviation, passengers are left interpreting policy through speculation. In a sector where consumers already struggle with complex pricing structures, such ambiguity compounds dissatisfaction. Aviation policy cannot afford to be reactive—it must be deliberate, consultative, and transparent. Decoding the “Triple Burden” on the Modern Traveller To understand passenger grievances, one must examine the evolving fare structure.Today’s traveller is not merely paying a ticket price—they are navigating a layered cost architecture: • A dynamically fluctuating base fare • A fuel surcharge that varies with limited transparency • A growing list of ancillary charges (seat selection, baggage, priority services) Individually, each component may be justified. Collectively, however, they create a perception of unpredictability and, at times, inequity. This is particularly relevant in the context of fuel surcharges. With fare caps removed to allow market-driven pricing, and policy measures indirectly supporting airline cost structures, the continued imposition of surcharges raises a legitimate question- Where is the mechanism that ensures cost benefits are shared with passengers?In the absence of such a mechanism, pricing becomes asymmetrical—cost increases are passed on quickly, but cost reductions are not always reflected with the same immediacy.Over time, this asymmetry erodes consumer confidence and invites regulatory scrutiny. Transparency: The Missing Link in Consumer Protection At the heart of the issue lies a structural deficiency: the absence of standardised fare transparency.Unlike other sectors where pricing components are clearly itemised and regulated; airline ticketing often presents a bundled cost that obscures the underlying breakdown. For a passenger, distinguishing between base fare, surcharge, and service fee becomes an exercise in guesswork.This lack of clarity has two consequences: 1. It weakens the passenger’s ability to make informed choices 2. It reduces accountability within the pricing ecosystem Further, transparency is not merely a consumer convenience—it is a regulatory necessity. Without it, even well-intended deregulation risks being perceived as opacity. Balancing Airline Viability with Passenger Fairness It is important to recognise that airlines are operating in a challenging environment. Aviation Turbine Fuel (ATF) prices remain volatile, global supply chains are under stress, and geopolitical developments—including tensions linked to regions such as Iran—continue to impact operational economics.However, acknowledging these realities does not negate the need for accountability.Aviation policy must reject the notion that passenger protection and airline sustainability are competing priorities. In fact, they are interdependent. A market that loses passenger trust ultimately undermines its own demand base. The objective, therefore, is not to constrain airlines, but to ensure that: • Pricing remains rational • Justifications are transparent • Adjustments are symmetrical And, this is the essence of a fair market. Why Grievance Redressal Must Evolve from Reactive to Systemic India’s current passenger grievance mechanisms, while functional, are largely reactive. Complaints are addressed individually, often after delays, and rarely feed into systemic reform.This approach is no longer sufficient for a sector of this scale. A modern aviation ecosystem requires a proactive grievance redressal model that: • Identifies patterns rather than isolated complaints • Enables real-time intervention • Integrates data into policy making Thus, without such a system, grievances accumulate silently until they manifest as widespread dissatisfaction or public backlash. The Case for a Permanent Passenger Protection Framework The issues currently being debated—free seating, fuel surcharges, ancillary pricing—are not isolated anomalies. They are indicators of a deeper need for institutional reform.A long-term solution must include:A Legally Enforceable Passenger Bill of Rights This would define, in clear terms, what a passenger is entitled to—across pricing, service quality, and compensation. Importantly, it would shift the conversation from discretionary practices to enforceable standards. 1: Real-Time Regulatory Oversight Technology can enable regulators to monitor fare trends, detect anomalies, and intervene when necessary. This is particularly critical during peak seasons or emergencies, where price surges can disproportionately affect travellers. 2: Standardised Pricing Disclosure Airlines should be required to present fares in a uniform, transparent format. This not only empowers passengers but also fosters fair competition. 3: Rationalised Surcharge Mechanisms Fuel surcharges, if necessary, must be linked to a publicly verifiable index, with automatic adjustments—both upward and downward. This ensures that pricing reflects reality, not discretion. 4: Regulation of Ancillary Revenues Ancillary services should remain optional—but not exploitative. Caps or guidelines may be necessary to prevent disproportionate monetization. Institutionalising Stakeholder Consultation One of the most significant gaps in recent policy making has been the limited visibility of stakeholder engagement.Aviation policy impacts multiple constituencies: • Passengers • Airlines • Airports • Regulators Yet, passenger representation remains the least formalized. The creation of a structured consultative body—bringing together all stakeholders—would ensure that policies are: • Better informed • More practical • Less prone to reversal

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Aviation Safety in India: Managing Experience Amid Rapid Expansion

By Col. Sanjay Julka , CEO (Technical) AR Airways Pvt. Ltd. In the relentless pursuit of expanding India’s aviation sector—marked by the induction of hundreds of aircraft across commercial, regional, training, and private fleets—experience emerges not as a luxury, but as an indispensable pillar of safety and sustainability. History unequivocally demonstrates that unchecked rapid growth, devoid of robust experience management, precipitates spikes in accidents. This pattern is evident in the alarming tally of incidents over the past nine months in the Non-Scheduled Operators’ Permit (NSOP) and private aviation segments, encompassing both rotary (helicopter) and fixed-wing operations. Indeed, even as this article was being written on the night of February 23, 2026 — hours after the Beechcraft C90 air ambulance crash in Jharkhand — a Pawan Hans helicopter crash-landed in the Andaman Sea the very next morning, as if to validate every word that follows. While infrastructure, assets, and even pilot training programs can be scaled swiftly through investments and inductions, human expertise—the nuanced judgment honed over years of handling diverse scenarios, weather anomalies, mechanical intricacies, and high-stakes decision-making—cannot be manufactured or accelerated. Artificial intelligence, for all its advancements, cannot fully substitute for it, as it lacks the contextual intuition and instinctive risk assessment born from real-world trials and errors. The current fragmentation in the NSOP sector exacerbates these risks. With approximately 490 aircraft scattered across 125 NSOPs—many operating just one or two planes and those with more numbers, often found juggling up to four different aircraft types—supervisory focus is diluted, regulatory oversight is stretched thin, and collective institutional experience is fragmented. This demands an impractical army of inspectors to handle 125 sets of accountable post-holders, surveillance audits, and regulatory audits. Consolidating operations—say, into 50 stronger entities (NSOPs) with a minimum of five aircraft each—would relieve pressure on regulators, pool expertise, and enhance supervision. Scheduled airlines already require a minimum of five aircraft within one year of certification; applying a similar threshold to NSOPs, along with capping aircraft types at four per operator to foster specialization, would consolidate experience where it matters most. Operating more than four aircraft types fritters away and dilutes crew experience — because pilots, engineers, and supervisors must spread their proficiency across too many type-specific procedures, checklists, performance envelopes, and maintenance regimes, preventing the deep specialization that builds genuine mastery and sound judgment. Each additional type also multiplies supervisory burden, requiring separate training syllabi, maintenance programmes, and dedicated check airmen—inevitably thinning oversight and widening the gaps where critical lapses occur. The result is a workforce that is broadly familiar with many types but deeply expert in none—a dangerous condition when split-second decisions and type-specific knowledge are what stand between a safe outcome and a fatal one. Crucially, India should permit Aircraft Management Companies—a globally accepted model inexplicably barred here. This would allow consolidated operations of third-party-owned aircraft under fewer, more experienced entities, streamlining oversight and reducing accident risks. A Year of Alarming Accidents (February 2025–February 2026) The past year has seen a troubling series of accidents, particularly in private, charter, training, and helicopter operations: February 24,2026* (the morning after this article was written)*: A Pawan Hans helicopter crash-landed in the Andaman Sea near Mayabunder shortly after taking off from Port Blair. All 7 onboard (2 crew,5 passengers) survived. The incident underscores, with chilling immediacy, the very warnings articulated in this article—that India’s rotary-wing and NSOP sectors remain acutely vulnerable. February 23,2026: A Beechcraft C90 air ambulance(VT-AJV) operated by Red Bird Airways crashed shortly after takeoff from Ranchi en route to Delhi in Jharkhand’s Chatra district. Seven on board (two pilots, patient, attendants, doctor, and paramedic); fatalities and injuries reported investigation ongoing. February 7, 2026: Indian Air Force Tejas light combat jet crashed during a routine training sortie at a front line base due to suspected brake/onboard systems failure. Pilot ejected safely; aircraft severely damaged. This was the third Tejas incident in recent years (following March 2024 near Jaisalmer and November 2025 Dubai Airshow fatal crash), leading to fleet grounding for inspections. January 28, 2026: Learjet 45 (VSR Ventures) crashed during landing near Baramati, Maharashtra, killing Maharashtra Deputy CM Ajit Pawar and four others. Triggered DGCA audits of NSOPs and uncontrolled airfields. January 10, 2026: India One Air Flight 102 (Cessna 208) forced landing near Rourkela; 1 fatality, 5 survivors. June 15,2025: Bell 407 helicopter (Aryan Aviation) crashed in Kedarnath valley, Uttarakhand, killing all 7 onboard during Char Dham Yatra pilgrimage. June 12,2025: Air India Flight 171 (Boeing787-8 Dreamliner) crashed shortly after takeoff from Ahmedabad into a medical college hostel, killing 241 onboard and 19 on ground(total 260 fatalities).Deadliest in decades; first fatal 787 hull loss. May-June 2025: Multiple helicopter crashes in Uttarakhand’s Char Dham route (at least 5 reported, including May 8 and June15 incidents killing 6 and 7 respectively). Other 2025 incidents: Trainee aircraft crashes (e.g., March 31 Cessna1 52 in Mehsana, April 22 Teena 2008JC in Amreli), helicopter mishaps (April 22 Gujarat, etc.), contributing to 8 major accidents killing 274 by mid-2025. These incidents—many in NSOP/private/charter/helicopter sectors—highlight dilution of oversight in fragmented operations. Why Experience Management Matters: A Visual Illustration The Supervisory Burden of 125 Fragmented NSOPs Company-Level Supervisors (per NSOP) Accountable Manager Quality Manager Safety Manager Continuous Airworthiness Manager Director of Flight Operations Director of Training Director of Maintenance (×125 NSOPs=875+supervisory post-holders) DGCA Oversight Required Flight operations Inspector Airworthiness Inspectors Flight Safety Inspectors (125 NSOPs=125 surveillance audits+125 regulatory audits = Inspector overload) Consolidating 125 NSOPs into 50 stronger entities (min. 5 aircraft each) would reduce company-level post holders by 60 % and cut DGCA audit load proportionally — freeing inspectors to conduct deeper, more effective oversight. (i) Consolidated NSOPs+ Management Companies (ii) Pooled Experience (iii) Safer Operations Rapid inductions add aircraft but not seasoned judgment overnight. Without reforms ,the boom risks tragic headlines. To forge a long-term solution, experience must be actively managed through regulatory changes: minimum five aircraft per NSOP, type limits at four, and enabling Aircraft Management Companies. Such consolidation would streamline oversight, pool expertise in fewer stronger organizations, and ensure

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Citation Ascend: Elevating Regional Business Aviation in Asia-Pacific

The New Benchmark for Regional Luxury Travel The Cessna Citation Ascend is a midsize business jet that seats up to 12 passengers, delivering large-jetfeatures without the large-jet operating costs and is the ultimate solution for HNWI travellers seeking efficiency, comfort, and prestige for regional trips. In this exclusive feature, Aviation World highlights the USPs of this aircraft which has been recently launched by the Cessna Citation family after being certified by the FAA in November 2025. The Business Aviation sector is evolving in the last few year in the APAC region especially India with the addition of large number of business jets in the small to mid-size category. The growing demand for private aviation in this region for short-to-medium haul routes like from Delhi–Male, Bangalore–Dubai, Mumbai – Bangkok has shown encouraging demand factor. The increase in HNWI has also prioritize regional efficiency and comfort without stepping into the super-midsize pricing, who highly prefer such type of aircrafts. To cater to such market, Textron Aviation family has recently launched the Citation Ascend – a cost-effective midsize jet having equipped with large-jet amenities with many added improvements over the previous series. The Citation Ascend has recently been certified by the FAA with deliveries commencing to customers in December 2025. The latest evolution builds on the success of the popular Cessna Citation 560XL series. It has over 1,000 aircraft delivered and is one of the most successful midsize business jet families ever produced. The 560XL family of aircraft is already highly popular in India and used by many companies and individuals for both VIP transport and charter flights. CABIN EXPERIENCE – A STEP BEYOND XLS GEN2 Enhancing the cabin experience from the previous series, Citation Ascend redefines the comfort and technology. The major features include: Flat Floor Option: Now standard to offer improved seated comfort and legroom providing more flexibility to passengers. The previous generation of Citation Ascend required to rest feet in a dropped aisle. 15% Larger Windows: The all-new cabin windows offer more natural light into the cabin with translucent and opaque shade settings and optional lighted window rings. The cabin features electric window shades and guests can access wireless controls via cabin management system or app through their own smartphone device. New Advanced Seating: Versatility with forward cabin side-facing seats, can be folded down to allow additional 50lb of stowage per seat. Additional features includes : Electric release tracking, lumbar support, customizable firmness. Quieter Cabin: It has advanced acoustic treatment system as cabin sound level is lower and guests can have the comfort of engaging in conversations or work and relax in a free environment similar to that of a driving car down the highway. Tech Upgrades: The guest and crew members has access to at least one charging port with 19 USB-C ports across the cabin for charging. There is provision for first-in-class wireless charging, cabin management system, digital pressurization, accent lighting in cupholders, window rings, under table, Bongiovi immersive sound system as an option to enhance onboard experience. Comparison Callout: Compared to previous generation, the Ascend’s cabin acoustics now equivalent to larger Citation Latitude, upgraded lighting, and storage enhancements. Inflight Wifi: To keep customers connection, the Citation Ascend offers optional Gogo Galileo HDX for Wi-Fi and worldwide calling. FLIGHT DECK & PERFORMANCE – CONFIDENCE IN EVERY MISSION Citation Ascend has installed state-of-the-art avionics and updated engines. Engine Upgrade: Two Pratt & Whitney Canada PW545D engines deliver fuel efficiency and increased thrust to the aircraft with maximum speed of 441 ktas (817 km/h), a maximum range of 1,940 nm (3,593 km) and a 900 lb (408 kg) full fuel payload. Range: 1,940 nm with 4 passengers at high-speed cruise – perfect for APAC regional connectivity.An unattended Honeywell RE100 [XL] Auxiliary Power Unit (APU) with self-management and added bleed leak detection allows pilots to prepare for every flight efficiently, including heating and cooling the cabin with less fuel and less noise. COCKPIT UPGARDE Cessna Ascend cockpit is equipped with Garmin G5000 avionics featuring the latest software which includes: :-Autothrottle technology to reduce pilot workload and provide flight-envelope protection :-Three large, 14-inch ultra high-resolution displays with split-screen capabilities :-Standard dual flight management systems :-Synthetic vision tech to render obstacles like mountains or terrain :-Cockpit voice and data satellite transceiver to make satellite calls from the cockpit :-Garmin advanced weather detection and avoidance technology BIG JET FEEL, SMART ECONOMICS For APAC region high net worth individuals and senior business executives value time and expect privacy along with cost efficiency without compromising on experience. This aircraft not only continues this legacy but also redefines what regional travellers should expect from the midsize jet category. The Citation Ascend isn’t just an upgrade—it will be a new standard for midsize business jets in India and beyond.

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The “Chain Reaction” on the Tarmac: Engineering a Failure-Proof Airport Environment

By Sameer Khale Director, Sheetala Infrastructure Consultancy Pvt. Ltd. The recent Foreign Object Damage (FOD) incident involving an Air India A350 at Delhi Airport—where a baggage container was ingested by a flagship engine—offers a sobering reminder of the fragile equilibrium that defines modern airfield operations. While early narratives understandably focus on ground-handling lapses and low-visibility conditions, from an engineering perspective, the incident points to a deeper structural vulnerability. In a high-energy international hub, a ₹100 wheel failure should never cascade into a ₹150-crore grounded asset. Preventing such escalation requires a fundamental shift—from managing incidents to engineering the operating environment itself. The Unseen Storm: Why Jet Blast Truly Matters A baggage trolley or container does not drift into an engine’s path by coincidence. In most cases, the silent catalyst is jet blast. The high-velocity exhaust plume generated by taxiing or departing wide-body aircraft produces intense turbulence across aprons and taxiways. Under these conditions, unsecured or marginally stable ground equipment can be displaced, tipped, or accelerated—transforming static tools into mobile hazards. At Sheetala Infrastructure, we address this phenomenon using Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD). By modelling the precise aerodynamic behaviour of an airfield, we design Jet Blast Deflectors (JBDs) that intentionally create aerodynamic “dead zones”—regions where exhaust energy is dissipated and ground equipment remains stable, even as aircraft such as a Boeing 777 or Sukhoi‑30 MKI operate nearby. This is not passive fencing. It is controlled energy management. Bridging the Military–Civil Divide Our experience as an Indian Air Force (IAF)–approved subcontractor has reinforced one fundamental lesson: safety is not a sliding scale. Military airfields demand infrastructure capable of withstanding extreme thermal loads, blast pressures, and kinetic forces—particularly from afterburner operations. By transferring this rigor to civil aviation environments, including greenfield and brownfield airports, we deliver a level of structural resilience that conventional perimeter solutions simply cannot achieve. Our 100% bolted, weld-free designs depart intentionally from legacy fabrication methods. Bolted systems offer superior fatigue resistance against continuous vibration, simplify inspection and replacement, and align with a faster, modular, and more environmentally responsible construction philosophy—an important consideration as Indian airports expand under tight timelines. The ROI of Prevention For airport operators, regulators, and investors, the economics are unambiguous. The capital cost of a localized JBD installation is a fraction of a single wide-body engine’s insurance deductible—let alone the cumulative losses associated with aircraft downtime, schedule disruption, passenger recovery, and reputational impact. In dense fog or low-visibility operations—when human observation and camera-based systems approach their functional limits—the physical infrastructure becomes the final, non-negotiable layer of defence. By strategically deploying JBDs at critical taxiway intersections and apron boundaries, airports can be functionally zoned into protected operational segments. This approach goes beyond procedural compliance with DGCA CAR Section 4 or ICAO Annex 14—it safeguards operational continuity itself. A Mission Aligned with Atmanirbhar Bharat India is now the world’s third-largest aviation market, yet for decades we have relied on imported systems for some of the most critical elements of airside safety infrastructure. As the only domestic manufacturer operating in this specialized domain, Sheetala Infrastructure’s mission is clear: to ensure Indian airports are protected by Indian engineering that meets—and exceeds—global benchmarks. The AI101 incident should serve as a strategic inflection point. Reactive responses to ground accidents are no longer sufficient. The future lies in engineering risk out of the system altogether. Our objective is simple but uncompromising: a future where Indian airports operate as near-zero-FOD environments, secured by indigenous, military-grade infrastructure designed for the realities of modern aviation.

Features

Islands of opportunity: Helicopter charters in Indonesia

Civil helicopter chartering is growing across the APAC region, and Indonesia is no exception. Saladin Siregar, Key Account Management for Passenger Air Chartering, APAC at global charter experts Chapman Freeborn, provides in-depth insights on helicopter charters in Indonesia, explaining why they are a good fit for the country and which sectors are driving growth. A diverse and growing civil helicopter fleet Fleet growth in civil turbine helicopters in the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region has been consistent and steady for over a decade. Between 2014 and 2024, it expanded from 3,287 up to 4,131 with a CAGR of 2.3%, according to research by the Asian Sky Group.At 154, Indonesia’s civil helicopter fleet represents 3.7% of the region’s total and is the largest fleet in Southeast Asia. This should come as little surprise considering the country’s unique geography, Saladin Siregar explains. “Indonesia is vast, and its geography is complex and unique,” he comments. “It is a country of over 17,000 islands, and many locations are extremely remote and difficult to access due to challenging terrain.”Travel difficulties are exacerbated by challenging infrastructure in both urban and rural areas. “In the cities, congestion is a significant issue. And outside urban areas, there are many locations where road or sea connections are impractical. These factors combined create strong demand for point-to-point helicopter transport.” A range of civil helicopter mission types Roughly half of all helicopter flights in Indonesia last year were multi-mission, according to the Asian Sky Group’s Helicopter Fleet Report 2024. The remaining 50% of flights were made up a of combination of corporate or private hire, offshore flights, and charters, which accounted for over 15% of all missions. There were also a small number of Emergency Medical Services (EMS), Search and Rescue (SAR), law enforcement, and training flights. Sectors driving helicopter charter demand The expansion of helicopter charters in Indonesia is being driven by a combination of sectors and use cases.First of all, there has been an uptick in usage around major cities and tourist locations. “VIP and corporate transport via helicopter charter is growing, especially in Jakarta and Bali,” explains Saladin Siregar. “In congested cities, helicopters provide faster and more reliable travel, which makes passenger helicopter charters popular with both businesses and tourists. In terms of the business sector, executives and project teams are making use of Chapman Freeborn’s chartering services.” Another sector that makes extensive use of helicopter charters is heavy industry. “There were over 4,600 active mining permits in Indonesia in 2024. And there are thousands of energy facilities and power plants spread across the country, including many small diesel plants and multiple Oil & Gas facilities. Many industrial sectors are expanding. For example, there is an increase in nickel and copper smelters, and in refineries. As you would imagine, these facilities are often located in remote areas. Furthermore, the transportation of mission-critical crew and cargo to these sites is often time sensitive, making helicopter charters the most viable and convenient option,” says Saladin Siregar. “Whether it is tourism, corporate travel, or accessing remote industrial facilities, helicopters provide unmatched access and flexibility. They help executives avoid city congestion and enable teams to mobilize rapidly to remote industrial sites,” Saladin Siregard concludes. The future outlook The team at Chapman Freeborn APAC anticipates further development in Indonesia’s helicopter charter market in the near-term and will be on hand to support their customers over this period.“We expect industrial growth in the country to continue and infrastructure challenges to persist. Based on this scenario, we expect to see a further increase in passenger and cargo helicopter charter demand over the next 5 years,” comments Saladin Siregard. “We are also looking at opportunities to expand passenger air chartering services for the corporate and VIP vertical.” With Chapman Freeborn’s strong understanding of Indonesia’s unique aviation landscape and close partnerships with key operators and regulating bodies, the company is well-positioned to meet this growing demand. “We are ready to offer safe, reliable and convenient helicopter charters to serve these customers these segments as demand increases,” concludes Saladin Siregard. With more than 50 years of experience and extensive global coverage, Chapman Freeborn provides air cargo charter services for major corporations, governments, NGOs, relief agencies, and high net-worth individuals. The company is part of Avia Solutions Group, the world’s largest ACMI (Aircraft, Crew, Maintenance, and Insurance) provider, operating a fleet of 187 aircraft worldwide and the parent company of over 250 subsidiaries. The group offers a wide range of aviation solutions, including MRO (Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul), pilot and crew training, ground handling, and other related aviation services. Supported by 14,000 highly skilled aviation professionals, the group operates across 6 continents. ( views expressed are personal)

Features

Using AI to transform aircraft maintenance and operations — a story of days to engine failure

At a modern airline operations control centre, predictive maintenance systems now aspire to flag early warnings based on real-time engine health data. When a forecast indicates that an engine is likely to exceed performance limits within a defined number of days, maintenance planners can proactively adjust flight schedules, arrange for spare parts, or schedule shop visits in advance. What once triggered emergency responses or unscheduled groundings is now managed through data-driven foresight. This transformation reflects how predictive AI modelling has turned potential disruptions into planned maintenance activities, improving operational reliability and reducing cost without compromising safety. By Sanjay Deshmukh,COO, Findability Sciences Before AI: maintenance by pattern, gut, and schedule Fifteen years ago, an engine showing subtle changes in exhaust gas temperature margins or vibration signatures would generate a paper trail: a technician’s note on a line maintenance card, a call into TechOps, and a conservative defensive response — ground the aircraft if in doubt, or ferry it to a maintenance base the next time it could be scheduled. Preventive maintenance relied heavily on flight-hour or cycle-based schedules, inspections driven by OEM service bulletins, and human judgment informed by experience. This approach protected safety but was inefficient: unnecessary shop visits, emergency AOG events, and expensive part shipments were common. The limitations were structural: data lived in silos, sensor streams were high-volume but noisy, and no operational system translated complex telemetry into a simple operational decision such as “this engine needs a shop visit within X days.” That translation — days to failure — is what airlines now prize, because calendar days map directly to planning windows for crews, aircraft rotations and spare logistics. The shift: combining data, twins and AI The first practical step was not a model but instrumentation and integration: richer telemetry (temperature, pressure, spectral vibration), consistent logging of flight context (thrust settings, profiles), and a link to maintenance history and environmental feeds. OEMs and MROs invested in digital twins — virtual replicas of engines that run physics-informed simulations alongside live telemetry — so that patterns in sensor drift could be interpreted against expected physical behavior rather than treated as raw anomalies. Rolls-Royce and others have championed digital-twin programs that let engineers explore “what if” scenarios without turning a wrench. Once the data plumbing was in place, airlines piloted models that forecast remaining useful life (RUL) and — crucially for operations — converted that into days to failure: calendarized RUL that factors in flight schedules and utilization. Early models were statistical or tree-based and offered explainability at the cost of flexibility. Today’s state-of-the-art prognostics blends physics constraints with deep sequence architectures — combinations of CNN-LSTM with attention or transformer-like encoders — that can capture long-range temporal patterns in noisy telemetry and fuse them with maintenance logs and environmental modes. Academic work in 2024–2025 has demonstrated improvements in RUL accuracy using CNN–LSTM–Attention hybrids and multiscale transfer learning tailored for aeroengines. A concrete example: Air France–KLM’s operational experiment Air France–KLM’s recent move to accelerate AI across its operations highlights how a large carrier approaches adoption. In late 2024 the group announced partnerships to deploy generative and predictive AI across its data estate — a strategic step that explicitly names predictive maintenance as a target area. For a carrier that operates hundreds of aircraft across global networks, moving from hours-long analyses to near-real-time probabilistic forecasting materially changes the cadence of maintenance decisions. In practice, the airline’s prototype architecture mirrored the emerging industry pattern: an edge tier on aircraft performs low-latency anomaly detection and compresses high-frequency data; a cloud tier runs ensemble prognostics and digital-twin simulations; and a frontline dashboard surfaces a clear days-to-failure forecast with confidence bands and top contributing factors (e.g., rising core temperature during climb cycles, elevated particle ingestion on specific sectors). The OCC used this information to make graded decisions — limit dispatch to short sectors, pre-order parts for the next planned shop visit, or approve a non-urgent ferry to a maintenance base — turning uncertain emergencies into scheduled, auditable actions. Best practices that made it work Successful deployments share practical patterns: • Align forecasts to decisions. Build the model output to answer operational questions: if the decision is “can this aircraft depart tomorrow?”, then present probability of failure within 24–72 hours, not a raw RUL number. • Quantify uncertainty. Probability distributions, prediction intervals, and cost-weighted decision thresholds prevent overreaction to a single point estimate. Operators need to know both the most likely days-to-failure and the worst-case window. • Human-in-the-loop workflows. Use the AI as an advisor. Maintenance planners validate and override forecasts early in rollout; their feedback then becomes training signals for model recalibration. • Hybrid models for explainability. Blend physics-informed constraints with deep ML so that failure drivers link to physically meaningful phenomena — vital for certification and trust. • Data governance and interoperability. Standardized data exchange (OEM, MRO, airline) and careful privacy controls make federated improvements possible without sharing raw operational data. Air France–KLM’s partnerships reflect this need to keep control of data while leveraging cloud AI capabilities. Challenges that persist Not all is solved. Data quality and left-censoring (engines observed only after installation) complicate life-history modeling; true failures are rare, so training sets are imbalanced; and operations evolve — flight profiles, new routings, or maintenance practices create covariate drift that must be detected and handled. Moreover, the certification and safety assurance of AI-infused prognostics remains a conservative, resource-intensive step: regulators and safety managers require rigorous demonstrations of conservatism under uncertainty and robust behavior in edge cases. Academic and industry studies stress the need for continuous validation pipelines and scenario stress tests to address these issues. Benefits realized — and measured When the system works, benefits cascade. Airlines report fewer aircraft on ground events, better shop utilization, and lower logistics costs from fewer urgent part shipments. Delta, Lufthansa and others have publicly discussed multi-year programs to digitize TechOps and apply ML for predictive maintenance; case studies point to measurable reductions in unscheduled removals and time-to-repair when analytics are tied to operations. For Air France–KLM, the

Features

MODAIR : LEADING INDIA’S AVIATION TRAINING ECOSYSTEM

ModAir Aviation IFSC Pvt Ltd is spearheading a major shift in India’s aviation training ecosystem by enabling access to leased training aircraft through GIFT City, Gujarat. This forward-looking initiative not only strengthens the national aviation framework but also reflects the vision of the Prime Minister’s Viksit Bharat mission, emphasizing self-reliance, skill development, and global competitiveness. Headquartered in India’s only operational International Financial Services Centre, ModAir Aviation has emerged as one of the earliest and most dynamic adopters of GIFT City’s specialized aircraft leasing platform. The company has successfully pioneered leasing arrangements for flight training academies across the country, creating a new standard in operational efficiency and accessibility for aviation education. Through this model, ModAir has already inducted multiple modern trainer aircraft, which are now supporting active pilot training operations across established Flight Training Organizations (FTOs) in Jalgaon, Khajuraho, and Karnataka. By offering flight schools the ability to lease rather than purchase aircraft, the company has effectively bridged a long-standing financial and logistical gap in India’s pilot training infrastructure. Flight academies benefit from improved cash flow, expanded training capacities, and access to technologically advanced fleets—all of which contribute to more cost-effective and efficient training processes. ModAir’s approach redefines the economics of pilot education in India by lowering entry barriers for flight schools and ensuring students train on the latest generation of equipment. This aligns closely with national initiatives such as UDAN and AtmaNirbhar Bharat, both designed to foster connectivity, job creation, and self-sufficiency across the aviation value chain. The company’s mission directly supports the government’s strategic focus on building a globally recognized hub for aviation skill development, where Indian pilots are trained to international standards. Atul Jain, Director and Promoter of ModAir Aviation IFSC Pvt Ltd, expressed pride in the company’s contribution to national development. “We aim to empower India’s youth to become world-class pilots and innovators,” he said. “Through access to leased aircraft and helicopters, ModAir is nurturing the next generation of aviation professionals while strengthening India’s standing as a leader in flight training and leasing across Asia. Our presence in GIFT City underscores our belief in India’s potential as a global aviation hub.” Building upon this strong foundation, ModAir has set an ambitious goal to induct 20 additional trainer aircraft by the end of 2026. This will substantially enhance the availability of modern aircraft for pilot training across India’s growing network of academies. Through GIFT City’s internationally competitive ecosystem—offering tax efficiencies, streamlined regulations, and global financial access—ModAir continues to demonstrate how innovative leasing models can accelerate the modernization of Indian aviation. By making aircraft leasing accessible, transparent, and sustainable, ModAir Aviation IFSC Pvt Ltd is helping India achieve its goal of producing thousands of highly skilled pilots while ensuring the growth of ancillary aviation sectors. The company’s efforts mark a pivotal step toward realizing the dream of a Viksit Bharat—one that takes flight through education, innovation, and enterprise. ( Advertorial)

FOREWORD

Dear Reader’s,

 

The current edition of Aviation World has covered many areas of Aerospace & Defence based on the latest development in the sector. The front cover highlights three different images, first for the Union Civil Aviation Minister ….. who is leading from the front to steer Indian Civil Aviation sector to witness one of the most interesting phases. He is also facing most tumultuous timing due to the ongoing financial stress in the Aviation sector due to ATF rising cost and long airspace restrictions resulting in mounting losses for Indian carriers. Despite of all the ground level challenges,the minister is addressing new things on regular basis which keeps the sector motivated. We have featured many such developmental works in this edition done under his guidance which will be interesting to read.

Our lead story on “ The West War” is another important feature which covers the ground level reality of the challenges faced by the Aviation sector. Its though time ahead and we believe it will pass soon .

There are features on Regional connectivity and MoCA revised rules on the UDAN 2.0 and how its going to transform the flying experience within India.

In this edition, we have covered topics on MRO,Various Policy changes,Sea Plane Operations by SkyHop Aviation, TATA-Airbus joint project on C295 military aircraft under Make In India which is expected to roll out soon and many other interesting contents which will be good to read.

We are covering Farnborough International Airshow 2026 from 20-24July 2026 in London and our next edition will be based on the same event.For features, you may contact our team on priority basis.

 

Happy Reading!

NEWSLETTER

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We have started 2026 on a very positive note and we look forward to increase our footprints to more locations and induct many more new companies in our campaign.. Do write to us at : editor@darkred-albatross-153160.hostingersite.com

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