Safety Management System (SMS) awareness is no doubt increasing, even though the pace is still slow and patchy at best.
Safety Management. Safety, in the context of Indian civil aviation and more specifically to the evolution of safety management, is now firmly linked to effective implementation of a Safety Management System (SMS), mandated by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO). Operational and business excellence is today synonymous with effective implementation of SMS. India appears divided on SMS issues — its reluctance to take definitive steps, is in sharp contrast to well-developed aviation markets.
Safety Culture and Public Apathy. The Air India (AI) Boeing 737 accident at the Mangalore table-top airport in 2009 resulted in total aircraft hull loss and fatalities to most of the passengers. It brought home starkly that much improvement is required to harmonise SMS benchmarks to international standards and best practices. The investigation into this accident has identified unintended failures that involve two stakeholders namely the regulator Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) and the service provider (AI). A classic case of an organisational accident that points to shortcomings in the safety culture of both the stakeholders. This was an avoidable accident. It reflects the shortcomings of civil aviation department to harmonise safety culture and SMS to international best practices. Sadly, it also reflects the apparent apathy of the common citizen in demanding accountability and high safety standards from aircraft operators. But this accident was back in 2009 and eight years have passed by. SMS awareness is no doubt increasing, even though the pace is still slow and patchy at best. If the pace has to pick up, it is key for the DGCA to embrace SMS first and lead by example. After all they are the aviation safety regulator of India. Also, operators need to voluntarily come forward to embrace SMS within their organisations. It really does take two to tango for the safety culture to spread all over.
Safety Downgrades and National Image. The repeated down-grading of Indian regulatory authorities on Significant Safety Concerns (SSC) by ICAO and the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) must have alerted the Indian Ministry of Civil Aviation (MoCA) on the need to implement internal changes driven by the imperatives of globalisation. The delay in implementing these changes was one of many reasons for downgrading in the past. With the ICAO scheduled to visit in November 2017, the DGCA would do well to evaluate the effectiveness of SMS implementation through a gap analysis and subsequent corrective actions.
The repeated downgrading of India by international civil aviation authorities and the constant media attention that these events have attracted has resulted in an image of India, as a country of low safety expectations. Singapore, Japan and the European Union are some examples of countries that had imposed restrictions on Indian aircraft operations in the past.
Safety Performance. Safety performance of general aviation (GA) has a long way to go to match international benchmarks. The civil helicopter accident rate indicates a trend of 5.87 per 1,00,000 flight hours (last 10 years), against a target rate of 1.9 per 1,00,000 flight hours. The safety performance of fixed-wing GA aircraft also needs significant improvement to match global standards.
It is with a view to improve safety performance that the BAOA (Business Aircraft Operators Association), has coordinated the visit of the IBAC (International Business Aviation Council) to the DGCA, on February 9, 2017, and hosting the first Safety Workshop for Business Aviation in India, on February 10, 2017. IBAC is expected to present the merits of India adopting the IS-BAO (International Standard for Business Aircraft Operations), as one of the means to implementing ICAO mandated SMS.
IS-BAO
The IS-BAO, as a safety standard, is rapidly gaining acceptance globally by civil aviation regulators. It is considered the Gold Standard in Safety. The standard is well known in developed aviation markets such as the US, Canada, Europe and Australia. Over 700 aircraft operators globally are certified to the IS-BAO across various stages, under a registration/certification process overseen by the IBAC (International Business Aviation Council), whose office is co-located with the ICAO in Montreal, Canada. Hence, wider adoption of the IS-BAO by India would raise the safety bar to an international benchmark, of acceptance globally.
IS-BAO has three stages — IS-BAO Stage 1 denotes that the physical elements of SMS is set up in the organisation and understanding of SMS is in place. Stage 2 denotes SMS has started functioning and running within the organisation. Stage 3 denotes the organisation has a mature and well entrenched SMS system in place. DGCA would be assisted by IBAC accredited third party auditors in taking operators through the IS-BAO stages.
The implementation of SMS in India is yet to mature. A collaborative approach between the DGCA and GA operators would be necessary to tackle the significant challenges posed by transformational change.
CHALLENGE OF TRANSFORMATIONAL CHANGE
Change Management. One of the reasons for poor implementation of SMS in India is the delay of the regulator as well as the GA/BA industry, to fully understand the nature of change involved in progressing from the concept of flight safety to that of SMS. This change can be said to be transformational, in that, a change is sought from a reactive response to accidents, to predicting accident trends, based on a positive safety culture that encourages openness in reporting potential hazards. In the Indian context, the change to an open and liberal safety culture needs nurturing by the civil aviation organisation as a whole. It would involve the implementation of a collaborative approach between the regulator, as well as the GA/BA industry, represented by the BAOA. Indeed, the BAOA would do well to expand the scope of its responsibilities to jointly work with DGCA and GA/BA operators to see India through this transformational change.
Challenges to Transformational Change. The single major challenge in bringing about the desired change is to get the DGCA and BAOA to effectively lead the change! John P. Kotter, the internationally acknowledged change management guru, says that “most major change initiatives generate only lukewarm results and most fail miserably”! He has identified the following eight steps that are critical to transforming organisations:
CONCLUSION
The implementation of SMS in India is yet to mature. A collaborative approach between the DGCA and GA operators would be necessary to tackle the significant challenges posed by transformational change. The advice of John Kotter on the need for organisations to “Lead the Change” and his advice on the “Eight Steps Critical to Transforming Organisations”, are relevant advice to senior safety managers of the DGCA and BAOA.
The efforts of the BAOA to introduce the ISBAO, as one of the means to implement ICAO mandated SMS is timely. The IS-BAO is well documented and provides GA aircraft operators a meticulous protocol to implement SMS.
The author is a MITRE Licensed SMS Instructor and IS-BAO Auditor, based in Bengaluru. The views expressed are those of the author.