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India aviation regulator to review Dreamliner safety

Published: 16 Jan 2013 - 08:31 am | Last Updated: 06 Feb 2022 - 05:44 am

NEW DELHI: India's aviation regulator said Wednesday it would conduct a safety review of the Boeing Dreamliner aircraft purchased by Air India after Japan's two biggest airlines decided to ground their fleets.

"We will review the situation in consultation with Boeing and Air India," Arun Mishra, the director-general of civil aviation, told AFP.

Boeing's troubled next-generation model has suffered a series of glitches that have prompted investigations by aviation regulators in Japan and the United States, although Boeing insists the plane is safe.

In the latest incident, an All Nippon Airways flight was forced into an emergency landing in southwestern Japan with the airline saying cockpit instruments had shown there was smoke in an electrical compartment.

Both ANA and its rival Japan Airlines (JAL) -- which are among Boeing's biggest customers for the Dreamliner -- said they would ground their entire 787 fleets pending safety checks.

However, Mishra said that "there were no plans to ground the Dreamliner right now" in India.

"I am in touch with Boeing and they are going to give me an update on the electrical problems they suffered in Japan," he added.

Air India purchased 27 Dreamliners as part of a 2005 multi-billion-dollar project, with the first plane delivered to New Delhi last September. Six planes have so far been delivered and the remaining 21 are expected to arrive by 2016.

The aircraft is seen as becoming the mainstay of loss-making Air India's global operations and airline officials hope it will attract new customers.

Considered a milestone in the aviation industry with its use of lightweight composite materials and electronics instead of aluminium and hydraulics, some 50 of the US aerospace giant's 787s are in service worldwide.

Boeing, which outsourced much of the production to Japanese and other contractors, says the plane's impressive fuel efficiency represents a revolution in aircraft design. (AFP)