One year after the Air India Express flight 812 crash at Mangalore, UK aviation experts are urging an international reassessment of safety protocols. The disaster, which claimed 158 lives, exposed systemic failures in crew training and operational oversight. Dr. James Whitfield, a former investigator with the Air Accidents Investigation Branch, stated that the accident was not an isolated failure but a symptom of deeper regulatory complacency.
The crash occurred during a landing attempt in adverse weather. The aircraft overshot the runway and plunged into a valley. Subsequent reports revealed the pilot had a history of procedural violations, and the airline's safety culture was described as inadequate. Whitfield argues that similar vulnerabilities exist across the industry, particularly in regions with rapid expansion of low-cost carriers.
"The physics of flight do not forgive shortcuts," Whitfield said. "Every flight is a balance of forces, energy, and human decision-making. When any of these are compromised, the consequences are catastrophic." He calls for a globally mandated fatigue risk management system and mandatory black-box data analysis for all commercial flights.
The UK Civil Aviation Authority has not yet issued a formal response, but internal sources indicate support for a review. The challenge lies in enforcement: without international consensus, carriers may exploit weaker regulatory regimes.
As climate change increases the frequency of extreme weather events, the aviation sector faces additional pressures. Whitfield points out that hotter air reduces lift, requiring longer runways and more precise handling. "We are asking pilots to perform at the edge of an envelope that is shrinking," he explained. "Climate change is not a future problem. It is altering operational conditions now."
The anniversary of the Mangalore crash serves as a grim reminder that safety gains are fragile. The UK experts' call for a global review may face resistance from cost-conscious airlines, but the data is clear: enhanced oversight saves lives. The question is whether the industry will act before the next disaster forces its hand.








