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Fourth Runway, Eastern Cross Taxiways Now Operational At Delhi’s IGI Airport

The Indira Gandhi International Airport, Delhi now has its fourth runway operational, along with the Eastern Cross Taxiway, which will substantially bring down the taxi time for airplanes.

Fourth Runway, Eastern Cross Taxiways Now Operational At Delhi’s IGI Airport

The fourth runway and dual Eastern Cross Taxiways (ECT) became operational at the Delhi airport on Friday, a development that will increase the capacity and operational efficiency of the country's largest airport, which is expected to have an annual passenger handling strength of 109 million in the near future. Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia on Friday inaugurated the fourth runway and ECT and said the country's civil aviation sector is at an inflection point and the beginning of the growth phase. Indira Gandhi International Airport (IGIA) is the first airport in the country to have four runways and ECT. It handles around 1,500 aircraft movements every day.

With the fourth runway and terminal expansion, which is expected to be completed soon, Scindia said Delhi airport's passenger handling capacity will increase to 109 million per annum. Currently, the capacity is 70 million passengers per year, he said and emphasised that Delhi airport will even beat Atlanta airport in its capabilities.

The fourth runway will result in the airport being able to handle more flights. It will increase the capacity throughput from the current level of 1,400 to 1,5000 aircraft movements to almost 2,000, Scindia said at the inauguration of the fourth runway and the ECT. Air travel demand is on the rise and in June, domestic air passenger traffic rose nearly 19 per cent year-on-year to around 1.25 crore.

With the operationalisation of the ECT, taxiing time for planes will come down to around 10-12 minutes from around 20 minutes earlier, Scindia said.

Talking about the ECT, he also said that while planes will be taxiing on the ECT, vehicles will be moving on the road below. Two wide-body planes like A380 and B 777 can use the ECT simultaneously, he added. A ceremonial water cannon salute was accorded to an Air India plane to mark the operationalisation of the fourth runway. Flight AI 821 took off from Delhi to Srinagar.

The ECT, which is 2.1 kilometres long and can accommodate wide-body aircraft, will reduce the time spent on the tarmac by passengers after landing and before take-off of their flights.

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The ECT will connect the northern and southern airfields on the eastern side of the airport and will reduce the taxiing distance for an aircraft by seven kilometres. The distance an aircraft needs to cover after landing on the third runway and going to Terminal 1 (T1) will be reduced to two kilometres from 9 kilometres now.

The dual-lane ECT can handle wide-body aircraft, including A-380 and B-777 and B-747. Each lane is 44 metres wide with a gap of 47 metres between them to allow simultaneous passage of two aircraft.

According to DIAL, the ECT is estimated to save around 350 kilograms of fuel every time an aircraft taxies through the runway from RW 29R to Terminal 1 and vice versa.