One of the sad duties on Goanet -- after being around for so long --
is to announce the departures of our friends (whom we have come to
know close through their many posts).

It is a sad task to announce the recent death of Philip Thomas, who
passed away of a heart-attack. Goanetters would remember him as having
a strong interest in aviation issues, the Dabolim airport, apart from
other concerns.

In real life, I never met Philip Thomas. Through his many posts, we
got to know him well though, and I'm sure the same would be said by
others too. Philip Thomas struck me as a patient and kind gentleman.
If he disagreed, he didn't get personal but made his point politely
and gently.

We'll miss Philip on Goanet. Condolences to his wife Mercy, and family
of three children.

Philip Thomas was an example of a Goan-by-choice, who had his heart in
this place. As the article below, which I ran into while browsing
recently, indicates. He understood issues well, and made his points
boldly when needed. FN

Aviation and Goa

June 24, 2005

In this special piece for this website, the Phil Thomas points out how
Goa may be India’s biggest tourism magnet, but its airport remains
under the control of the Indian Navy and cannot be developed.

Great Wall of Goa

By Phil Thomas

Goa is the biggest tourism magnet, and a recent newspaper report (May
27) had blithely recommended that the State should go in for an
airport that can land the giant A380, which is India’s largest
aircraft carrier at a a greenfield site.  It suggested that the
airport could be developed at Mopa in Goa by 2014!

If this is seriously pursued, it can cause incalculable harm to Goa's
already distorted aviation scene by further skewing the badly needed
efforts to improve it. In fact a careful look at the vexed problem of
Goa's aviation scenario may shed useful light on the overall national
problem of urgently updating our airport infrastructure.

Goa's sole airport, Dabolim in the south, is controlled since the
early 1960s by the Navy which places unrealistic restrictions on a
tourism oriented facility in the name of interminably training a
couple of squadrons of pilots for carrier based fighter operation
using obsolescent and tricky Sea Harriers.

As you may be aware, the Navy has recently commissioned a mammoth base
called Project Seabird at Karwar about 100 km south of Goa in
Karnataka. The ostensible purpose of this project is to decongest
Mumbai harbour. However there is no commensurate will to decongest
Dabolim airport for civilian flight purposes i.e. by shifting military
flight training etc to Seabird or even other places. The air station
there is still only on paper, awaiting financial and other high level
clearances. It could become a reality in the next phase of the
project. Its another matter that the Karwar terrain is not all that
suitable for any airflield which is much more than of minimal

proportions.

In the mean time, Dabolim has been "booked" for training pilots of
MIG29Ks which have recently been acquired along with an old Russian
aircraft carrier. These carrier based fighters are said to be the
first to be ordered by any Navy in the world. So the prospect of the
Navy easing up on civilian flight restrictions at Dabolim in the
foreseeable future are quite dim.

That's why I call the military presence at Dabolim airport the Great
Wall of Goa! The only way out may be to push for joint
military/civilian management which is not unheard of abroad in places
like the U.S. But where will the push for this come from? But more on
this later. Lets first look at Mopa, the recommended alternative site
for the greenfield project.

Mopa

For the past couple of years, a proposal has been doing the rounds for
a greenfield airport at Mopa in North Goa. There is natural resistance
to this for several reasons. First, it is feared that once Mopa is
ready then civilian flghts at Dabolim will have to cease. There are
several precedents for this. This happened at the Navy air station in
Kochi when the public/private greenfield airport called CIAL came up
nearby a few years ago. The same thing is due to occur at HAL
controlled Bangalore airport when the new BIAL comes up in 2-3 years
time.

A discontinuation of civilian flights like this would always be a boon
for the military which would naturally prefer a free run at its bases.
It is another matter whether the Navy, whose essential armament is
carrier based aircraft, really needs an airport with a mammoth 11,000
foot runway which is fit for jumbo jets (including perhaps the A380
after a suitable upgrade of the type you described). Thus Dabolim at
present, you will appreciate, is a purely dog-in-the-manger situation.

On the other hand, Mopa would cut into the business of South Goa
hotels which depend heavily on international chartered and scheduled
domestic flights at close-in Dabolim. There is also a strong hunch in
Goa that Mopa would only give a much needed boost to emerging
competitor resorts in southern Maharashtra. In fact the INDIAN EXPRESS
article of May 27 graphically shows links to offbeat places like
Ratnagiri, Kolhapur, Sindhudurg etc from Mopa, while ostensibly
emphasising an aircraft  (A380)which is meant for hub-to-hub
international travel.

Low Cost Aviation

Now that India has finally caught the low cost aviation bug there may
be some hope for beleaguered civil aviation at Dabolim. It is
beginning to be realised that there is a need for more functioning
airports including multiple facilities for big cities. (Note that Goa
can be usefully viewed as a "city state"). In Mumbai the AAI is
bitterly regretting having parted with Juhu airport to the BMC thirty
years ago for road building purposes. There is talk of reopening
Bangalore and Hyderabad airports even when BIAL and HIAL are
operational. Even the Kochi naval airport is being eyed again for
civilian use! But all this may be wishful thinking now.

At Pune, however, industry bigwigs have succeeded in getting the IAF
to substantially increase the watch hours (by 40% from 10 hours to 14
hours per day) at Lohegaon airport. In stark contrast to the Navy at
Dabolim, the Air Chief has even made reassuring comments about sharing
"national assets" like airports. But at Pune the real test will come
when the new Chakan airport is promoted in a few years time. In any
event, the urgent need for effective joint use and management of
military air bases is clearly underlined in the present vexatious
scenario.

Persistent Blindspot

In view of the foregong, it is odd that in the face of the severe
bottlenecks we are reportedly facing at our airports there is this
persistent blindspot about the fundamental source of problems there
viz. the military controls which apparently account for a substantial
part of the constraints faced. As many as 25 airports have such
constraints. In addition air space restrictions by the military such
as at Delhi create their own problems for aircraft movements. All
these may well be the result of "holy cow" treatment of military
matters by the civilian authoriities all along.

Without enlightened review and response to civilian imperatives
proactively by the military itself (except where it suits its own
purposes) the only options for Indian aviation are either to burn
precious fuel while waiting for slots to open up or keep capital
assets idle on the ground or go in for costly and time consuming
greenfield airport projects with their attendant risks of humungous
land scams. All this only militates against the diffusion of low cost
aviation which is the need of the hour in a big and populous country
like India with low but now rapidly growing purchasing power.

The Policy Imperative

There clearly seems to be an urgent need for a high level review of
the military controls in important airports like Goa and the
expeditious dismantling of flight restrictions on civilian flights
subject of course to the usual needs for sensible security safeguards)
and the establishment of
procedures for effective joint use and management.

If such a review is conducted and implemened then perhaps Seabird will
get expedited, the Navy will cut back at Dabolim, Mopa can come up
(not as a pie in the sky A380 airport but something more practical and
prompt). And the Goan economy and society would benefit immeasurably
-- as would the larger Indian scene as a whole.

http://suchetadalal.com/?id=15feed2a-c21b-88f7-492e8b536c2e&base=sections&f&t=Aviation+and+Goa
-- 
FN +91-9822122436 P +91-832-2409490
Konkani adages  http://konkani-adages.notlong.com/
Medieval Goa     http://medieval-goa.notlong.com/

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