Govt. revamps UDAN scheme with changes in subsidy


UDAN Scheme Revamp — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Phase Key Feature
UDAN 1.0 (2017) Initial operationalisation; 5 airlines, ~72 routes
UDAN 2.0 (2018) Water aerodromes, helicopter routes added
UDAN 3.0 (2019) Tourism routes, seaplanes
UDAN 4.0 (2020–21) Remote/hilly areas focus; PPP airstrips
UDAN 5.0 (2023) 50-seater aircraft, expanded cities list
Modified UDAN (2026) 5-yr subsidy, exchequer funding, ₹28,840 cr outlay

4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Total outlay (2026–36) ₹28,840 crore
Airline subsidy component ₹10,043 crore (over 10 years)
Airport infrastructure component ₹12,159 crore (over 8 years)
New airports targeted 100 (from unserved airstrips)
Subsidy duration (modified) 5 years (was 3 years)
Subsidy source (modified) Direct exchequer (was passenger levy on trunk routes)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Administrative

Ethical / Governance

Legal / Constitutional

Scientific / Technological


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. UDAN stands for "Ude Desh ka Aam Nagrik" — launched under NCAP 2016. [S5]
  2. First UDAN flight: Shimla to Delhi, April 2017. [S5]
  3. Implementing agency: Airports Authority of India (AAI) under Ministry of Civil Aviation. [S5]
  4. Mechanism: Viability Gap Funding (VGF) via reverse auction / competitive bidding. [S5]
  5. Modified UDAN approved by Cabinet on 25 March 2026 with outlay of ₹28,840 crore. [S1][S4]
  6. Of ₹28,840 cr, ₹10,043 crore is airline subsidy and ₹12,159 crore is airport infrastructure. [S4]
  7. Subsidy period extended from 3 years to 5 years in the 2026 revamp. [S1][S2]
  8. Modified UDAN shifts subsidy source from ticket levy (RCF) to direct government exchequer. [S1][S4]
  9. Target under Modified UDAN: develop 100 new airports from unserved airstrips. [S4]
  10. As of 2024: 663 routes operationalised; 162.47 lakh passengers carried since inception. [S2][S7]
  11. Route viability post-subsidy: only 7–10% of UDAN routes remained operational after subsidy ended — the core problem prompting revamp. [S3]
  12. Aviation is a Union List subject (Entry 29, Seventh Schedule) — Centre has exclusive legislative authority. [Constitutional knowledge]
  13. The original VGF was funded partly through the Regional Connectivity Fund (RCF), a levy on domestic trunk-route tickets. [S5]
  14. UDAN 2.0 added water aerodromes and helicopter routes; UDAN 3.0 added tourism and seaplane routes. [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper mapping: - GS-III: Infrastructure (aviation), government schemes, transport policy - GS-II: Government policies and interventions, welfare schemes, centre–state coordination

Specific syllabus headings: - GS-III: "Infrastructure: Energy, Ports, Roads, Airports, Railways" - GS-II: "Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors"

Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "The UDAN scheme has succeeded in symbolic milestones but failed at structural viability. Critically examine the modifications introduced in 2026 and assess whether they address the scheme's fundamental weaknesses." 2. "Discuss the role of Viability Gap Funding (VGF) as a tool for promoting regional air connectivity in India. What are its limitations, and how does the 2026 Modified UDAN scheme attempt to overcome them?" 3. "Examine how shifting aviation subsidies from a cross-subsidy levy model to direct exchequer funding impacts fiscal transparency, equity, and scheme sustainability."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Civil Aviation Policy (NCAP) 2016 Parent policy under which UDAN was conceived
Airports Authority of India (AAI) Act, 1994 Statutory basis for AAI's role as nodal agency
Viability Gap Funding (VGF) — concept Core financing mechanism used in UDAN and other PPP infrastructure
Regional Connectivity Fund (RCF) Original levy-based funding pool replaced by exchequer funding
Sagarmala & Bharatmala schemes Parallel connectivity schemes (ports, roads) — often asked comparatively
North-East Air Connectivity UDAN's special focus region; ties to Act East Policy
Public–Private Partnership (PPP) in infrastructure UDAN route bidding is a PPP model; cross-links to GS-III PPP syllabus

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Ministry confusion: UDAN is under Ministry of Civil Aviation, NOT Ministry of Transport or NITI Aayog. AAI is the implementing nodal body.
  2. Year confusion: UDAN was announced in NCAP 2016 but the first flight operated in April 2017 — do not conflate announcement with operationalisation.
  3. Subsidy figures: Total outlay is ₹28,840 crore — NOT just the airline subsidy (₹10,043 cr). MCQs may test individual components.
  4. Levy vs. exchequer: The old model used a passenger levy on trunk routes (RCF); the 2026 model uses direct exchequer — confusing the two is a common slip.
  5. 3 vs. 5 years: The extended subsidy is 5 years (was 3) — a common MCQ trap given both numbers circulate in prelims prep material.
  6. Viability record: Candidates often assume UDAN was a "success" because large passenger numbers are cited — but only 7–10% of routes were self-sustaining, which is the scheme's principal weakness driving the 2026 revamp.

11. Sources