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Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport

Coordinates: 22°39′17″N 088°26′48″E / 22.65472°N 88.44667°E / 22.65472; 88.44667
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Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorAirports Authority of India
ServesKolkata Metropolitan Region
LocationDum Dum, Kolkata, West Bengal, India
Opened1924; 100 years ago (1924)
Hub forAlliance Air
Focus city forAir India
Operating base for
BuiltEarly 1900s as the Calcutta Aerodrome
Time zoneIST (UTC+05:30)
Elevation AMSL5 m / 16 ft
Coordinates22°39′17″N 088°26′48″E / 22.65472°N 88.44667°E / 22.65472; 88.44667
Websitewww.nscbiairport.com
Map
CCU/VECC is located in Kolkata
CCU/VECC
CCU/VECC
CCU/VECC is located in West Bengal
CCU/VECC
CCU/VECC
CCU/VECC is located in India
CCU/VECC
CCU/VECC
CCU/VECC is located in Asia
CCU/VECC
CCU/VECC
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
01L/19R 3,190 10,470 Asphalt
01R/19L 3,627 11,900 Asphalt
Statistics (April 2023 - March 2024)
Passengers19,784,417 (Increase 11.3%)
Aircraft movements140,879 (Increase 2.6%)
Cargo tonnage151,626 (Increase 11.5%)
Source: AAI[1][2][3]

Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport (IATA: CCU, ICAO: VECC) is an international airport serving the city of Kolkata and the Kolkata metropolitan area. It is the primary aviation hub for eastern and northeastern India. It is located approximately 15 km (9.3 mi) from the city centre. The airport is locally known as Kolkata Airport and Dum Dum Airport before being renamed in 1995 after Subhas Chandra Bose, one of the most prominent leaders of the Indian independence movement. The airport's IATA code CCU is associated with "Calcutta", the former legal name of the city. Opened in 1924, Kolkata Airport is one of the oldest airports in India.

Spread over an area of 6.64 square kilometres (2.56 sq mi), Kolkata Airport is the largest hub for air traffic in the eastern part of the country and one of four operational airports in West Bengal, the others being Bagdogra International Airport in Siliguri, Cooch Behar Airport in Cooch Behar and Kazi Nazrul Islam Airport in Durgapur. The airport handled around 20 million passengers in the financial year 2023–24, making it the sixth-busiest airport in India in terms of passenger traffic, after Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad and Chennai airports.[1] The airport is a major centre for flights to Northeast India, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Southeast Asia and the Middle Eastern cities of Dubai, Doha and Abu Dhabi. It is situated across Jessore Road in Dum Dum area of Kolkata metropolitan region.

History

[edit]
Subhas Chandra Bose at the airport in 1938

Early history

[edit]

Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport was founded in the early 1900s as the Calcutta Aerodrome.[4] The airport traditionally served as a strategic stopover on the air route from North America and Europe to Indochina and Australia.[citation needed] Dakota 3 was the first aircraft to land in the airport.[5] In 1924, KLM began scheduled stops at Calcutta, as part of their Amsterdam to Batavia (Jakarta) route.[6][7][8] The same year, a Royal Air Force aircraft landed in Calcutta as part of the first round-the-world expedition by any air force.[9][10][11]

The airport began as an open ground next to the Royal Artillery Armoury in Dum Dum.[11][12][13][14] Sir Stanley Jackson, Governor of Bengal, opened the Bengal Flying Club at Dum Dum/Calcutta aerodrome in February 1929.[15] In 1930, the airfield was made fit for use throughout the year,[16] and other airlines began to utilise the airport. Air Orient began scheduled stops as part of a Paris to Saigon route[17] and Imperial Airways began flights from London to Australia via Calcutta in 1933, thus drew many airlines to Calcutta Airport.[8][18][19] Many pioneering flights passed through the airport, including Amelia Earhart's in 1937.[20][21][22]

Calcutta played an important role in the Second World War. In 1942, the United States Army Air Forces 7th Bombardment Group flew B-24 Liberator bombers from the airport on combat missions over Burma. The airfield was used as a cargo aerial port for the Air Transport Command and was also used as a communication centre for the Tenth Air Force.[23][11]

Post-independence

[edit]
Nepal Airlines at Dum Dum Airport in 1974
Scandinavian Airlines is one of the many European airlines that used to operate to Kolkata at one point. Seen here is their inaugural flight to Kolkata.

Passenger services grew after the Second World War. Calcutta became a destination for the world's first jet-powered passenger aircraft, the de Havilland Comet, on a British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC) route to London.[10][24][25] Furthermore, in 1964 Indian Airlines introduced the first Indian domestic jet service, using Caravelle jets on the Calcutta–Delhi route.[26] Between the 1940s and 1960s, the airport was served by several major airlines including Aeroflot,[27] Air France,[28] Alitalia,[29] Cathay Pacific,[30] Japan Airlines,[31] Philippine Airlines,[32] KLM,[33] Lufthansa,[34] Pan Am,[35] Qantas,[36] Swissair,[33] and SAS.[37]

Due to the introduction of longer-haul aircraft and the poor political climate of Calcutta during the 1960s, several airlines discontinued their service to the airport. The 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War saw a large increase of both refugees and disease in Calcutta, causing more airlines to cease services to the city. In 1975, the airport opened the first dedicated cargo terminal in India.[38]

The 1990s saw new growth for Calcutta Airport, as the Indian aviation industry saw the arrival of new airlines such as Jet Airways and Air Sahara. A new domestic terminal named Terminal 2 was opened in 1995 making the international one Terminal 1, and the airport was renamed in honour of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose. In 2000, a new international arrival hall was opened.[5][39]

Modernisation

[edit]
Check-in area of the integrated terminal
Departure hall of the integrated terminal
Exterior of the new integrated terminal

2005 saw the growth of low-cost carriers in the Indian aviation sector, with new airlines including SpiceJet, IndiGo, and Kingfisher Airlines. This led to a dramatic rise in passenger numbers at the airport. Overcrowding in both terminals led to the implementation of a comprehensive modernisation plan for the airport.[40][41][42]

Panoramic view of the departures area of Terminal 2 at NSCBIA, Kolkata (2023)
The Domestic terminal

Work included an expansion of runway 01L/19R, rapid-exit taxiways and parking bays. The runway was extended by 400 metres (0.25 mi) (2790 metres to 3190 metres) on the northern side and 1,000 feet (300 m) on the southern side and was fitted with CAT-I facilities for night use. A 119-year-old mosque that lies 30 metres from the runway' northern end prohibits further expansion in this direction.[43] The longer runway, 01R/19L, was upgraded from CAT-I to CAT-II ILS status to allow landings in poor visibility. In August 2014, it was announced that the instrument landing system of the primary runway would be upgraded to CAT-IIIb. This allows flights to operate till visibility drops below 50 metres. The secondary runway would be upgraded to CAT-II. The 120 crore (equivalent to 141 crore or US$17 million in 2023) upgrading work started in February 2015[44][45] and was completed in January 2018.[46]

The modernisation plan included some improvements of the airport's existing terminals, including the addition of extra ticketing counters, check-in kiosks, and cafes to the domestic terminal in 2009. However, the need to replace the airport's terminals entirely led to plans for a new integrated terminal, known as T2 to differentiate it from the older domestic block, to serve both international and domestic destinations. A Thai-based company, the Italian-Thai Development (ITD) Corporation (ITD-ITDCem JV, a consortium of ITD and ITD Cementation) and the 125-year-old iconic Project Management Consultant–Parsons Brinckerhoff (PB) was hired with Delhi-based designer Sikka Associates Architects to construct the building. Construction commenced in November 2008, and T2 was inaugurated on 20 January 2013 after overshooting the previous deadlines of July 2011 and August 2012.[47][48] The former airport hotel 'Ashok' was demolished to give way for two new five-star luxury hotels and a shopping mall in its place.[39][49]

Commercial operations were intended to start on 23 January 2013, the 116th birth anniversary of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose.[50] However, the shift to the new terminal was only completed on 16 March 2013.[51] Airports Council International named it the best improved airport in the Asia-Pacific region in 2014 and 2015.[52][53][54][55]

Infrastructure

[edit]

Runways

[edit]

Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose International Airport has two parallel runways, the primary runway 01R/19L has a capacity of approximately 35 flights per hour and the secondary runway 01L/19R has a capacity of 15 flights per hour. The secondary runway is usually used as a taxiway when the main runway is used. When the primary runway is shut down for maintenance purposes, the secondary runway is used.[56][57]

Runways at NSCBI Airport
Runway number Length Width Approach lights/ILS
01L/19R 3,190 m (10,470 ft) 46 m (151 ft) CAT I / CAT II
01R/19L 3,627 m (11,900 ft) 46 m (151 ft) CAT III-B / CAT II

Hangars and ground services

[edit]

Air India operates hangars at the airport, while Bharat Petroleum and Indian Oil act as fuellers. Catering facilities are owned by Taj-Sats and Oberoi Flight Services.[58][59]

Terminals

[edit]
The ceiling of the new integrated terminal is adorned with works by Rabindranath Tagore.[60]

The airport's new integrated terminal T2 is spread over 233,000 m2 (2,510,000 sq ft) and can handle 25 million passengers annually, compared to the previous terminal T1's capacity of five million. The terminal is an L-shaped structure, containing six levels. It contains 128 check-in counters that utilise CUTE (Common User Terminal Equipment) technology and has 78 immigration counters and twelve customs counters.[61] Passenger lounges are provided by Air India. The terminal is equipped with 18 aerobridges and a further 57 remote parking bays. There are plans to construct an 18-foot bronze statue of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose in the integrated terminal complex.[62][63]

Kolkata's old international and domestic terminals closed permanently when the integrated terminal opened. However, there were plans to renovate the old international terminal to be used for future hajj services, while the domestic terminal could be used by regional airlines. An earlier proposal of continuing low-cost carrier operations from the existing domestic terminal has been shelved due to the need to fully utilise the new integrated terminal's capacity, making it the first airport in India to shift even its low-cost domestic airlines to the new integrated building upon completion.[51][64][65] However, the old terminal will be replaced by a new terminal T3 to increase the overall capacity.[66]

In the financial year from April 2011 to March 2012, Kolkata Airport served 10.3 million passengers, 85% which were travelling domestically.[67] The withdrawal of Lufthansa's service to Frankfurt in March 2012 left Kolkata with no direct connections beyond Asia.[68] However, other international operations increased in 2012.[67] The new terminal has attracted some airlines to expand their route networks to include Kolkata.[69][70]

In September 2012, the Airports Authority of India upgraded the airport's cargo-handling capacity, enabling it to cater for the demand until 2015–16. There has been a 25 per cent growth in international cargo movement to and from Kolkata Airport and a 15 per cent increase in outward transit. Automobile parts accounted for the bulk of the growth in the movement of cargo from the city to other countries. In November 2008 the first Centre for Perishable Cargo (CPC) in West Bengal was opened at the airport. The CPC has an area of 742.5 m2 (7,992 sq ft) and an annual storage capacity of 12,000 million tonnes. The CPC had been undergoing trials that started in June 2008 and were built with a 6.75 crore (equivalent to 7.9 crore or US$950,000 in 2023) grant-in-aid from the Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority (APEDA) part of the Commerce Ministry.[71] The volume of export was 21,683 tonnes in 2008–09, during the current fiscal more than 23,042 tonnes of cargo were handled by the airport. Similarly, the volume of import cargo increased from 16,863 tonnes to 18,733 tonnes, increasing over ten per cent during the same period. However, in 2008–09 the total volume of cargo handled by the airport declined by 4.8% from the previous year.

On 3 June 2019, Singapore Airlines operated the Airport's first Airbus A350 service from Singapore to Kolkata, enhancing the weekly seat capacity.[72]

Expansion

[edit]
Airside
ATC complex of NSCBIA. A new 51.4m tall control tower is currently under construction.
Bird's eye view of the integrated terminal
Airside of NSCBIA, Kolkata at night

The construction of terminal T2, as well as runway expansion, marked the end of Phase 1 of the project. AAI officials have announced that they are prepared to execute Phase 2 of the Kolkata Airport expansion plan. This involves the construction of a new ATC Tower to provide controllers with a better view of the planes at the new terminal. The building will be accompanied by a 4-storey office complex.[73][74] Initially, a 112-meter tower was proposed, but the height has been revised multiple times and in 2017 it was decreased to 51.4 meter.[75] The under-construction tower is expected to be complete by late 2023 and will replace the older one constructed in 1972.[76] By July 2024, the construction of the ATC was completed but the installation of all necessary equipment was due.[66]

New expansion plan

[edit]

The new terminal T2 inaugurated in 2013 is on the verge of reaching its annual capacity of 26 million passengers four years ahead of the initial projections. To tackle this, AAI has planned to upgrade and expand the airport and increase its passenger capacity by construction of another terminal T1 to handle up to 33 million passengers annually. The new terminal will come up north of the current integrated terminal T2. The new ₹5,000 crore expansion plan will be carried out in two phases over a span of six years. The number of parking bays will be increased to 105 by 2024. Additionally the existing terminal is undergoing an interim expansion of ₹130 crore which will see the terminal handle an additional 2 million passengers annually, bringing the total handling capacity of the existing terminal to 28 million passengers annually.[77][78][79][66]

Phase 1

[edit]

Airport officials said as per the first phase of the expansion plan, the old domestic terminal T1 will be demolished and a 7000 sq. m. new building will be constructed in the area. The building will be linked with the existing terminal of the airport with the help of walkalators and would also have walk-in gates on the ground floor. This building will be used only for boarding and de-boarding of passengers. Passengers arriving in the boarding building would take the connecting bridge to the terminal and then leave the airport. This would reduce peak-hour congestion when several flights do not get enough apron space. This would immediately increase the passenger capacity by a few million and would solve the space crunch for the time being.[78][80] The new building will be U-shaped where the rectangular section (the location of parking lot of old terminal) will host the check-in counters, security check portals and baggage handling facilities. The two arms (one each at the northern and southern end) will function as concourse and will host operational area, house boarding gates and aerobridges. The rectangular section and southern arm will be built as part of the phase 1. The phase 1 expansion plan has been sanctioned by AAI.[66]

Phase 2

[edit]

The phase 2 of the is yet to receive approval from the aviation ministry. In this phase, the old Air Traffic Navigation Building will be demolished to make way for the northern concourse of the new terminal as mentioned above. The construction of new hangars and bays is also part of the current expansion plan.[80][78][66]

Airlines and destinations

[edit]

Passenger

[edit]
AirlinesDestinations
Air Arabia Abu Dhabi[81]
AirAsia Kuala Lumpur–International
Air India Bengaluru (ends 1 January 2025), Chandigarh, Chennai (ends 31 January 2025), Delhi, Dibrugarh, Dimapur, Guwahati, Imphal, Mumbai, Silchar
Air India Express[82] Agartala, Bengaluru, Bhubaneswar, Chennai,[83] Goa–Dabolim, Guwahati, Hyderabad, Imphal, Indore,[84] Jaipur,[85] Kochi, Port Blair,[84] Siliguri, Surat
Akasa Air[86] Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Mumbai, Port Blair,[87] Pune
Alliance Air[88] Aizawl, Bhubaneswar, Bilaspur, Dimapur, Guwahati, Imphal, Jharsuguda, Lilabari, Prayagraj (resumes 10 January 2025), Rourkela, Rupsi, Shillong, Silchar
Bhutan Airlines[89] Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi,[90] Paro
Seasonal: Ho Chi Minh City (begins 31 January 2025)[91]
Biman Bangladesh Airlines[92] Dhaka
Drukair[93] Paro
Emirates[94][95] Dubai–International
Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi[96]
flydubai[97] Dubai–International
IndiaOne Air Cooch Behar,[98] Jamshedpur[99]
IndiGo[100][101] Agartala, Ahmedabad, Aizawl, Amritsar, Bengaluru, Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi,[102] Bhubaneswar, Chandigarh, Chennai, Coimbatore, Darbhanga, Delhi, Dehradun, Deoghar,[103] Dhaka, Dibrugarh, Dimapur, Gaya, Goa–Dabolim, Goa–Mopa,[104] Gorakhpur, Guwahati, Hanoi,[105] Ho Chi Minh City,[105] Hyderabad, Imphal, Indore, Itanagar,[106] Jaipur, Jharsuguda,[107] Jorhat, Kochi, Lucknow, Mumbai, Nagpur, Patna, Phuket (begins 27 December 2024),[108] Port Blair, Pune, Raipur, Rajkot, Ranchi, Shillong, Silchar, Siliguri, Singapore, Srinagar, Surat, Vadodara, Varanasi, Visakhapatnam
Malaysia Airlines[109] Kuala Lumpur–International
Myanmar Airways International[110] Yangon
Qatar Airways[111] Doha
Singapore Airlines Singapore[112]
SpiceJet[113][114] Bengaluru, Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Delhi, Guwahati, Mumbai, Patna, Port Blair, Siliguri
Thai AirAsia Bangkok–Don Mueang, Phuket[115]
Thai Airways International Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi[116]
Thai Lion Air Bangkok–Don Mueang (begins 16 December 2024)[117]
US-Bangla Airlines[118] Dhaka

Cargo

[edit]
AirlinesDestinations
Atlas Air[119] Dubai–Al Maktoum, Liège
Blue Dart Aviation[120][121] Bengaluru, Delhi, Guwahati, Mumbai
IndiGo CarGo Delhi, Dhaka, Guangzhou, Guwahati, Hanoi, Hong Kong, Mumbai, Yangon
My Indo Airlines Yangon
SpiceXpress Delhi, Ezhou,[122] Guiyang, Hanoi, Hong Kong, Mumbai, Nanning, Yangon
World Cargo Airlines Yangon
YTO Cargo Airlines Dubai–Al Maktoum, Hangzhou

Statistics

[edit]

As of the financial year 2019–20, Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport was again the fifth-busiest airport in India in terms of the total number of passengers served and with respect to the number of flights departing and arriving at the airport, which was about 22 million and 430 flights a day respectively. This was a 0.6% increase from the previous year. Out of which, 19 million passengers were domestic travellers and 3 million were international travellers.[123] The cargo traffic saw a decline of 1.1% from its previous year, with 153,468 metric tonnes of cargo.[124]


Annual passenger traffic at CCU airport. See Wikidata query.
Passenger and cargo traffic (2009–2024)
Year Passengers Change Cargo (MT) Change Ref
International Domestic Total
2009–10 11,87,160 68,58,564 80,45,724 Steady 1,10,256 Steady [125][126]
2010–11 14,28,086 82,03,586 96,31,672 Increase 19.7% 1,29,957 Increase 17.9% [125][126]
2011–12 15,66,102 87,37,889 1,03,03,991 Increase 7.0% 1,25,593 Decrease 3.4% [127][128]
2012–13 16,44,339 84,24,316 1,00,68,655 Decrease 2.3% 1,23,491 Decrease 1.7% [129][130]
2013–14 17,65,013 83,35,219 1,01,00,232 Decrease 0.7% 1,29,782 Increase 6.2% [131][132]
2014–15 19,26,562 89,90,107 1,09,16,669 Increase 8.1% 1,36,699 Increase 5.3% [133][134]
2015–16 22,17,473 1,02,03,771 1,24,21,244 Increase 13.8% 1,39,679 Increase 2.2% [135][136]
2016–17 22,30,071 1,35,89,468 1,58,19,539 Increase 24.0% 1,52, 415 Increase 9.0% [137][138]
2017–18 25,86,775 1,73,05,749 1,98,92,524 Increase 25.7% 1,63,323 Increase 7.2% [139][140]
2018–19 27,86,805 1,90,90,545 2,18,77,350 Increase 10.0% 1,55,232 Decrease 5.0% [141][142]
2019–20 29,39,322 1,90,76,069 2,20,15,391 Increase 0.6% 1,53,468 Decrease 1.1% [123][124]
2020–21 1,43,081 75,85,825 77,28,906 Decrease 64.9% 1,04,953 Decrease 31.6% [143][144]
2021–22 3,42,665 1,06,93,443 1,10,36,108 Increase 42.8% 1,38,127 Increase 31.6% [143][144]
2022–23 19,56,019 1,58,02,453 1,77,58,472 Increase 60.9% 1,36,022 Decrease 1.5% [145][146]
2023–24 24,68,601 1,73,15,816 1,97,84,417 Increase 11.4% 1,51,626 Increase 11.5% [147][148]
Busiest domestic routes from CCU (2023–24)[149]
Rank Airport Carriers Departing Passengers
1 Delhi Air India, Air India Express, IndiGo, SpiceJet, Vistara 13,07,098
2 BENGALURU Air India, Air India Express, Akasa Air, IndiGo, SpiceJet, Vistara 8,56,233
3 Mumbai, Maharashtra 7,87,663
4 GUWAHATI 4,89,113
5 Hyderabad, Telangana 4,37,479
6 Chennai, Tamil Nadu 4,27,764
7 AGARTALA 4,13,052
8 BAGDOGRA 2,98,822
9 Bhubaneswar, Odisha 2,46,389
10 PORT BLAIR 2,25,519
Busiest International routes from CCU (2023–24)[149]
Rank Airport Carriers Departing Passengers
1 DHAKA AIR INDIA,BIMAN BANGLADESH,INDIGO,NOVO AIR,QATAR AIRWAYS,SPICEJET,US BANGLA AIRLINES 2,60,277
3 BANGKOK BHUTAN AIRLINES,INDIGO,SPICEJET,THAI AIRWAYS,THAI SMILE AIRWAYS,THAI AIR ASIA 2,01,982
2 DUBAI EMIRATES AIRLINE,FLY DUBAI 1,92,424
4 SINGAPORE INDIGO, SINGAPORE AIRLINES 1,04,026
5 DOHA QATAR AIRWAYS 75,364
6 KUALALUMPUR AIR ASIA BERHAD, MALINDO AIRWAYS 61,930
7 HO CHI MINH CITY INDIGO 22,580
8 KATHMANDU AIR INDIA 20,930
9 HANOI INDIGO 18,158
10 PHUKET GO AIR 15,405

Ground transport

[edit]

Roads

[edit]
The West Bengal Transport Corporation operates air conditioned buses to the airport.

The airport has a well-established facility of prepaid taxis and air-conditioned buses connecting it to the city centre. Ride-hailing services including Uber and Ola operate here regularly. As part of the larger modernisation programme, a flyover at Nagerbazar and an entry ramp on VIP Road have also been constructed. A 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) flyover from Kestopur to Raghunathpur (near Tegharia) was built to speed up airport-bound traffic. These reduced journey times to the airport.[150][151] Parking facilities at the new terminal include two underground parking levels accommodating 3000 cars, as well as an outdoor car parking which can handle an additional 2000 cars.[152][153][154]

West Bengal Transport Corporation (WBTC) operates air conditioned buses to major parts of Kolkata from 08:00 to 21:00 throughout the week.[155]

Metro

[edit]

Two new Kolkata Metro lines are under construction which will connect to the airport: one from Noapara (Yellow Line), and the other from New Garia (Orange Line).[156] Both lines will converge at the Jai Hind metro station (formerly Biman Bandar metro station).

Rail

[edit]

The airport was connected to the Kolkata Suburban Railway system's circular line branch. The 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) long elevated track connected the airport Biman Bandar railway station with Dum Dum Cantonment railway station, passing Jessore Road. Electric multiple unit rolling stocks served the line. However, due to poor patronage and plans to replace it with metro service, the railway line was closed in September 2016 to facilitate construction of the new lines.[157][158] The remaining infrastructure was dismantled in early 2020 to make space for road upgrades.[159]

Presently, the nearest two rail stations are Durganagar railway station and Birati railway station.

Awards

[edit]

In 2014 and 2015, the airport won the title of Best Improved Airport in the Asia-Pacific region awarded by the Airport Council International. The airport was awarded the Best Airport by Hygiene Measures in the Asia-Pacific in 2020 by Airports Council International.[160]

Accidents and incidents

[edit]

On 2 May 1953, BOAC Flight 783 de Havilland Comet bound for Delhi crashed after takeoff from Calcutta Airport with the loss of 43 lives. Parts of the aircraft were found spread over an area of 8 km², near Jugalgari, a village some 25 miles north-west of Calcutta, suggesting disintegration before impact with the ground.[161]

On 12 June 1968, a Pan-Am Flight (N798PA, named Clipper Caribbean) Boeing 707-321C struck a tree 1128 m short of the runway during a night-time visual approach in rain. The aircraft subsequently crashed and caught fire. The fuselage remained largely intact, although the aircraft's landing gear broke off. Out of the 10 crew and 53 passengers aboard, 1 crew member and 5 passengers suffered fatal injuries due to the fire.[162][163]

On 22 December 2015, a Jet Airways bus slammed into the side of an Air India Regional ATR 42-500 aircraft. There were no fatalities. An investigation revealed that the driver was sleeping.[164][165]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency

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