The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has issued a mandatory safety directive for Airbus A318, A319, A320, and A321 aircraft, directing all Indian airlines to immediately carry out specific inspections, software upgrades, and mandatory modifications before flying the affected planes again. The regulator has made it clear that no aircraft can continue in commercial service unless it meets the required safety standards listed in its latest order.
The instruction, released on Saturday, comes at a critical moment for global aviation safety. Airbus has just warned that more than 6,500 aircraft from its A320-family fleet worldwide require an urgent software fix, raising alarms across airlines and regulators.
In its official notification, the DGCA stated that inspection and/or modification related to the aircraft’s flight control system is now compulsory, and operators must immediately update their compliance records.
The regulator’s directive clearly states:
“Inspection and/or modification on the following subject is mandatory. Please make necessary amendment in the below-mentioned Mandatory Modification List.”
The DGCA further emphasized that no person is permitted to operate an aircraft falling under the scope of the directive unless it fully complies with the required Mandatory Modifications and applicable Airworthiness Directives (ADs).
This makes the instruction not just advisory but legally binding for all operators flying Airbus A318–A321 aircraft.
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The DGCA’s order follows just hours after Airbus issued a significant global alert. The aircraft manufacturer revealed that over half of its A320-family jets globally—more than 6,500 aircraft—require an urgent software fix.
This warning reportedly came after a troubling incident involving a JetBlue A320. According to reports, investigators found that “intense solar radiation” had the potential to corrupt data critical to flight-control functions. Any corruption in flight-control data can compromise aircraft stability and responsiveness, prompting immediate attention from global regulators.
Following the alert, aviation authorities overseas instructed operators to apply the fix before an aircraft’s next scheduled flight—highlighting the urgency of the situation.
India is a major market for Airbus narrow-body aircraft, with carriers such as IndiGo, Air India, and Air India Express together operating around 560 aircraft from the A320 family.
Out of these, an estimated 200–250 aircraft in India are expected to require the urgent software upgrade. These aircraft will need to be grounded briefly while the patch is installed.
Although the grounding is expected to be temporary, it may result in operational disruptions, flight reshuffling, and short-term schedule adjustments for airlines.
According to the DGCA’s directive, airlines must:
Update aircraft compliance records immediately
Carry out the mandatory inspection and modification
Ensure affected aircraft do not operate until the fix is completed
Maintain documentation in line with the Airworthiness Procedure Manual
Confirm that modifications match the requirements listed in the Mandatory Modification List
The directive highlights strict accountability. Airlines must ensure that no aircraft is cleared for flights unless it meets every applicable requirement.
The A320 family forms the backbone of domestic aviation in India, and any grounding—however short—can impact schedules, operational efficiency, and passenger movement.
Given that more than one-third of India’s A320 fleet may require immediate fixes, airlines will likely:
Prioritize rapid software installation
Reroute aircraft to minimize delays
Make temporary adjustments to flight schedules
While the DGCA directive aims to ensure uncompromised passenger safety, it also highlights the scale and complexity of modern aviation systems—where even external factors like solar radiation can impact flight operations.
The DGCA’s tone in the notification underscores its consistent stance that safety overrides operational convenience.
The regulator’s statement reiterates:
“This is to be ensured that no person shall operate the product… except those which are in accordance with the compliance to requirement of Mandatory Modification(s).”
By moving swiftly after Airbus’ advisory, the DGCA has ensured that Indian operators stay aligned with international safety standards.
Operators are expected to:
Ground-affected aircraft briefly
Install the software fix
Update compliance logs
Report completion to the DGCA
Since the issue is global, Indian airlines will likely coordinate with Airbus and international regulators for timely execution.
Passengers may experience short-term rescheduling, but the move ensures long-term operational safety for the nation’s most widely used aircraft type.
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