Air India has secured formal regulatory approval from the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) to transition its Boeing 787 widebody fleet to Electronic Technical Logbooks (ETL) as the primary technical document. The aviation regulator has also authorised a concurrent parallel implementation of the digital platform across the airline’s Boeing 777 fleet. This milestone marks a significant leap forward in the carrier’s ongoing multi-million dollar digital transformation programme, positioning it among the early global adoptions of fleet-wide digital maintenance logging for the Dreamliner aircraft.
The newly cleared electronic logbook system completely replaces traditional, cumbersome paper-based maintenance records with a highly secure digital interface. By enabling real-time sharing of crucial technical data directly between maintenance engineers on the ground, flight crews in the cockpit, and centralized operational teams, the platform significantly optimizes standard workflow coordination. Airline officials noted that the immediate transparency provided by the ETL framework will substantially accelerate defect reporting and subsequent rectifications, which will directly translate to a higher aircraft dispatch reliability rate across long-haul operations.
Beyond day-to-day operational speed, the digital repository strengthens overall data integrity, maintenance governance, and strict compliance tracking for audits. The platform’s integrated data analytics capabilities will also allow engineering teams to utilize predictive maintenance strategies, recognizing potential component issues before they disrupt flight schedules. Jeremy Yew Jin Kit, Senior Vice President of Engineering and Maintenance at Air India, praised the cross-functional coordination between tech teams, manufacturing partners, and regulators that enabled the transition, adding that the paperless initiative simultaneously advances the carrier’s corporate sustainability objectives.