Thursday 2nd May 2024

Air India To Reduce Flights On US Routes

Air India will bring down the frequency of flights temporarily to certain routes in the United States to address the issue of crew shortages, Air India’s Managing Director and CEO Campbell Wilson announced today. In terms of nonstop flights between India and the US, Air India is now the main provider.

In order to expand the number of pilots for its fleet of Boeing 777 aircraft, the airline would be limiting the number of flights it operates to New York’s Newark airport and San Francisco’s airport by three each per week for two to three months, Wilson told the media on the sidelines of the CAPA India Aviation Summit. Presently, Air India has 17 flights per week to San Francisco and six flights per week to Newark. The airline has 47 weekly flights to the US in total.

Air India’s flights to and from the US have occasionally experienced lengthy delays or even cancellations over the previous few months. In India, there is a relatively small pool of pilots with the Boeing 777 rating, according to Wilson. The airline expects to hire 100 pilots and 1,400 cabin crew within the next two to three months. Wilson stated that Air India does not expect a significant crew scarcity in the medium term because the airline plans to increase its crew numbers as its fleet and network grow.

Air India has been pushing to quickly put its grounded aircraft back into service, especially the wide-body aircraft since it was sold to the Tata group. Crew shortage has become an issue as several of these have resumed flight.

Air India will also replace some twin-aisle aircraft with narrow-body aircraft on some flights to Bangkok and Dubai over the next few months as part of the plan to address the issue of a crew shortage for wide-body aircraft.

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India Received NISAR Satellite For Space Mission

On Wednesday, March 8, the United States Air Force handed over the NISAR satellite to the Indian space agency. The US Air Force C-17 aircraft brought an Earth observation satellite known as NISAR and landed in Bengaluru to hand over to India Space Research Organisation (ISRO).

The US Consulate General Chennai tweeted, “Touchdown in Bengaluru!”  to inform that ISRO received NISAR.

See the Tweet here.

The satellite  NASA-ISRO synthetic aperture radar (NISAR) is a project collaboratively developed by NASA and ISRO. This was envisioned eight years ago in 2014 by NASA and ISRO to launch dual frequency synthetic aperture radar on an Earth observation satellite.

NISAR will be the first dual frequency radar imaging satellite that uses two different frequencies (L-band and S-band). According to the NISAR’s official website, it is designed with a Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) that can produce fine-resolution images even from a resolution-limited radar system.

The NISAR mission is planned to launch in January 2024 from Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, into a near-polar orbit. It will operate for at least three years, map the globe in 12 days, and send consistent data to study in detail Earth’s dynamic land and ice surfaces.

The NISAR will be used for various purposes by ISRO. It will provide a bunch of data and information that helps to measure the changes on the planet’s surface, such as melting glaciers, changes in carbon storage, sea level rise, depletion in groundwater levels, and examining the impact of global warming.

It will also help to manage natural hazards such as tsunamis, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions to assess and manage the risk better by making response times faster.

Moreover, it will help to improve agriculture, such as crop growth, and detect the early signs of drought by measuring soil moisture and wildfires.

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