What is Greenfield Airport Policy?
Historical Background
Key Points
12 points- 1.
A Greenfield Airport is defined as an airport built on a new site, from scratch, where no existing airport infrastructure was present. This contrasts sharply with brownfield airportsupgrading or expanding existing airports, which involve modifying or adding to an already operational facility. The policy specifically targets areas needing new air connectivity or where existing airports are saturated.
- 2.
The policy mandates a two-stage approval process for greenfield airport projects. First, a 'site clearance' is granted by an inter-ministerial Steering Committee, which assesses the suitability of the proposed location. Second, after detailed project reports and feasibility studies, an 'in-principle' approval is granted by the Ministry of Civil Aviation, allowing the project to proceed with development.
- 3.
The Steering Committee, chaired by the Secretary of the Ministry of Civil Aviation, includes representatives from various ministries like Defence, Environment, and Finance. Its purpose is to ensure comprehensive evaluation of the proposed site, considering factors like air space availability, environmental impact, and strategic importance, before any major investment is made.
Visual Insights
Evolution of Greenfield Airport Policy in India
This timeline illustrates the key milestones and developments in India's Greenfield Airport Policy, from its inception to recent project completions, highlighting the government's focus on new aviation infrastructure.
The Greenfield Airport Policy emerged from the necessity to expand India's aviation capacity due to surging air traffic and limitations of existing brownfield airports. It marked a strategic shift towards planned, private-sector-led development of new airports to support economic growth and regional connectivity.
- Early 2000sRapid growth in air travel demand, leading to congestion at major airports (Delhi, Mumbai). Ad-hoc approach to new airport development.
- 2008Greenfield Airport Policy introduced by Ministry of Civil Aviation. Aim: address demand, enhance connectivity, decongest existing airports, attract private investment.
- 2016UDAN Scheme launched under National Civil Aviation Policy, further boosting regional connectivity and demand for new/upgraded airports.
- 2023Mopa International Airport (Goa) becomes operational, a successful Greenfield project enhancing tourism and connectivity.
- 2024 (Target)Government targets operationalizing 100 new airports under UDAN scheme, many being smaller greenfield airstrips.
- March 2026
Recent Real-World Examples
1 examplesIllustrated in 1 real-world examples from Mar 2026 to Mar 2026
Source Topic
Noida International Airport Phase 1 Nears Completion, Boosting Regional Connectivity
EconomyUPSC Relevance
Frequently Asked Questions
121. What is the fundamental difference between a 'Greenfield' and 'Brownfield' airport project, and why is this distinction crucial for UPSC Prelims?
Greenfield means building an entirely new airport from scratch on undeveloped land, like Noida International Airport. Brownfield involves expanding, upgrading, or modernizing an existing airport, such as the expansion of Delhi's IGI Airport. This distinction is crucial because the Greenfield Airport Policy only applies to new constructions, not upgrades, and UPSC often tests this definitional clarity in statement-based questions.
Exam Tip
Remember 'Greenfield = Green land = New start'. 'Brownfield = Brown (old) land = Existing structure'.
2. Why did India need a dedicated 'Greenfield Airport Policy' in 2008, instead of just continuing to expand existing airports or building new ones ad-hoc?
Before 2008, airport development was ad-hoc. Major airports were severely congested, but expanding them (brownfield) faced huge challenges like land scarcity, operational disruptions, and high costs in urban areas. The Greenfield Policy provided a structured framework to attract private investment systematically, ensure planned development of new capacity, address regional connectivity needs, and streamline approvals for new sites, overcoming brownfield limitations.
