Over 100 flights were delayed, diverted or cancelled due to dense fog at Delhi's Indira Gandhi International Airport, which witnessed its first major disruption this winter.
Stranded passengers had to spend long hours at the airport as the domestic and international flights were delayed for upto five hours. The fog started to envelop the airport around 1900 hours on Saturday evening reducing visibility to zero and lasted for over 17 hours forcing the airport authorities to implement low visibility procedure.
Thirty-eight domestic and international flights were cancelled while around 30 flights were delayed. 42 flights, including 14 international, had to be diverted Hyderabad, Jaipur, Ahmedabad, Chennai, Kolkata and Lucknow as the runway visibility dropped to less than 100 metres.
According to airport authorities, 326 flights operated using various categories of instrument landing system. "160 flights operated using category III-B ILS which is used when the runway visibility is upto 50 metre. The reason for large number of delays was due to visibility hovering between 100 to 150 metre which is less than the prescribed lower limit of 125 metre for an aircraft to take off," officials said.
The Directorate General of Civil Aviation has now fixed the minimum limit of 125 metre for small aircraft and 150
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