Rabu, November 5, 2025

Revitalizing Indonesia’s General Aviation Ecosystem

Dr. Afen Sena, M.Si. IAP, FRAeS
Dr. Afen Sena, M.Si. IAP, FRAeS
Profesional dan akademis dengan sejarah kerja, pendidikan dan pelatihan di bidang penerbangan dan bisnis kedirgantaraan. Alumni PLP/ STPI/ PPI Curug, Doktor Manajemen Pendidikan dari Universitas Negeri Jakarta, International Airport Professional (IAP) dari ICAO-ACI AMPAP dan Fellow Royal Aeronautical Society (FRAeS).
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Introduction

General Aviation (GA) — encompassing private, corporate, and non-scheduled flight operations — has long been a silent contributor to national connectivity, economic resilience, and innovation. In developed aviation economies like the United States, Singapore, and the United Arab Emirates, GA plays a vital role in maintaining logistics continuity, pilot training pipelines, and air mobility diversification. Yet in Indonesia, a vast archipelagic state of over 17,000 islands, GA remains underdeveloped and administratively fragmented.

Indonesia’s aviation policy, historically centred on commercial scheduled carriers, has yielded a mature airline industry but left its non-scheduled and general aviation sector lagging. This imbalance limits the growth of the aviation workforce, investment diversification, and innovation capacity that could complement the national vision of “Indonesia Emas 2045.”

However, reform does not require a new bureaucracy. It requires integration — an efficient, effective, and implementable system that optimizes existing agencies, infrastructure, and digital platforms. Indonesia already possesses the institutional backbone: the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), AirNav Indonesia, and the newly merged AP Indonesia (consolidating Angkasa Pura I and II). What is needed now is coordination, not creation; synergy, not separation.

The Global Context: General Aviation as an Ecosystem

Globally, GA operates as an ecosystem, not a singular market. It integrates aircraft ownership, flight support, MRO (maintenance, repair, and overhaul), pilot training, and digital service platforms. The business chain typically spans seven verticals:

  1. Aircraft Management and Charter Services – private, corporate, and air-taxi operations under CASR Part 135.
  2. Aircraft Sales and Leasing – financing, fractional ownership, and registry consulting.
  3. Flight Support and Ground Handling – logistics, fuelling, trip coordination.
  4. Maintenance and MRO – light maintenance and component repair under Part 145.
  5. Flight Training – pilot and technician schools under Part 141 and 147.
  6. Digital and Data Services – scheduling, flight tracking, and airspace management.
  7. Regulatory Oversight – compliance monitoring under DGCA and ICAO standards.

This multidimensional ecosystem demonstrates that GA thrives where existing structures are optimized through functional specialization, not through establishing new organizations. Countries such as Singapore, Malaysia, and the UAE have restructured existing aviation entities to accommodate GA without fragmenting authority.

Comparative Overview: Lessons from Regional Models

Country / Hub Key Features Policy Instruments / Enablers Source
United States Mature GA sector, large fleet, extensive flight training, large MRO ecosystem FAA regulatory framework; private ownership; finance & insurance markets FAA Economic Impact Report (2023); faa.gov
Singapore (Seletar) Integrated aerospace & GA cluster; co-location of MRO & training JTC/EDB land & incentives; Seletar Aerospace Park cluster model JTC Corporation, Seletar Aerospace Park Brochure
UAE (Dubai South) Aerotropolis model; high GDP contribution Free zones, PPPs, regulatory sandbox, airport-led strategy Oxford Economics – Dubai Airports Report (2023)
Malaysia (Subang) Regeneration of Subang as GA & MRO cluster National Aerospace Industry Blueprint 2030; PPP approach Malaysia Aerospace Industry Blueprint 2030
Indonesia (proposed) Large geographic market; underused secondary airports; training hubs CASR Parts 91/135/145; integrated AP Indonesia–AirNav–DGCA digital policy DGCA & AirNav Indonesia data

The Business Ecosystem of General Aviation

A functioning GA sector creates ripple effects across the economy. It fuels demand for skilled labour, catalyses regional connectivity, and sustains the domestic aviation supply chain.

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  1. Core Market Verticals

Aircraft Management & Charter: Demand for corporate, medical, and government missions has risen post-pandemic, particularly from mining, logistics, and agro-industries.

MRO and Component Services: Secondary airports like Budiarto or Banyuwangi could host light maintenance clusters leveraging AP Indonesia’s assets.

Flight Schools and Human Capital: With around 150 active flight and maintenance schools (Tempo, 2024), the GA expansion could require up to 220 by 2030.

Digital Services: Flight tracking, scheduling, and airspace data platforms align with AirNav’s modernization agenda.

  1. Institutional Enablers
    Indonesia’s institutional ecosystem already includes:

DGCA (Kemenhub): CASR compliance regulator.

AirNav Indonesia: Airspace capacity manager.

AP Indonesia: Airport operator managing over 30 facilities, many underutilized.

BRIN: R&D and innovation partner.

BKPM: Investment facilitator and incentive gatekeeper.

No new agency is needed — only sharper functional coordination.

Economic Potential and Employment Impact

Indicator Baseline (2025) Assumptions Projection 2030 Source / Comment
Market value (USD) 380 million CAGR 25% 1.2 billion Bappenas 2024; ICAO DataPlus
Employment (jobs) ~7,500 1 job / USD 16k–20k ~20,000 FAA, AOPA multipliers; BPS data
Flight schools ~150 Demand-linked growth ~220 Kemenhub registry
Aircraft registry ~120 units Leasing, fractional ownership ~400 DGCA registry

Growth depends on integration, not expansion — leveraging digital tools, optimized assets, and policy synergy.

Policy Integration Framework

Dimension Existing Agency Current Gap Integration Instrument Source
Regulation & Oversight DGCA Overlapping CASR parts; manual permit workflows GA-One Gate Service (GA-OGS) – e-AOC/e-ROC DGCA; ICAO e-Registry
Infrastructure AP Indonesia, Local Gov’t Underused secondary airports Shared-use PPP for hangars, MRO, training AP Indonesia merger filings
Air Navigation AirNav Indonesia Limited GA slot management Integrated digital flight support AirNav Annual Report 2024
Innovation BRIN, Universities Limited GA R&D National GA Innovation Cluster (NGIC) BRIN, Bappenas
Investment & Incentives BKPM, MoF No GA incentives Priority list for MRO, training BKPM Blueprint 2025
Human Capital Flight Schools Fragmented curricula “Pilotpreneur” certification Tempo 2024; ICAO NextGen Aviators

Strategic Integration Model (2025–2030)

  1. Digital Integration (2025–2026): Link OSS-RBA, DGCA e-SKEP, AirNav AIM, and AP Indonesia A-CDM into a unified dashboard.
  2. Shared Infrastructure (2026–2027): Utilize secondary airports (Banyuwangi, Ternate, Ngloram) for GA and training hubs.
  3. Commercial Parallelism (2027–2028): Allow scheduled airlines to operate GA services via AOC extension.
  4. Innovation & Financing (2028–2030): Introduce Venture Partnership schemes through BRIN–BKPM collaboration.

 

SWOT Analysis: Indonesia’s GA Development

Strengths Weaknesses
Large market; extensive geography Fragmented oversight; complex licensing
Existing airport & AirNav infrastructure Limited finance and insurance access
Growing middle-class demand Low digital interoperability

 

Opportunities Threats
Domestic MRO, training export Fuel, forex volatility
Fractional ownership, aero-tourism Policy discontinuity
Regional collaboration potential Safety incidents impacting investor trust

Integration, Not Duplication: Policy Philosophy

Indonesia does not need a new General Aviation Authority. It needs an integrated governance mechanism rooted in efficiency, effectiveness, applicability, and implement-ability.

Efficient — minimize duplication across DGCA, AirNav, and AP Indonesia through interoperable data systems.
Effective — ensure every reform produces measurable outcomes in connectivity, workforce development, and service quality.
Applicable — build systems using technology and resources already available.
Implementable — design policies that can be executed directly at airports, training centers, and flight operations.

These principles align with Bappenas’s Regulatory Reform 2045 Framework (2024) emphasizing optimization over proliferation.

Challenges and Way Forward

Key Challenges:

  1. Data Fragmentation and Sectoral Silos: Each agency maintains separate databases and performance metrics. The immediate task is establishing a National GA Data Protocol for secure, real-time data exchange.
  2. Digital Readiness and Human Capital Gaps: Transitioning to integrated systems demands upskilling. Establishing a Centre of Excellence in Transport Digitalization can bridge this gap.
  3. Regulatory Alignment: Harmonizing CASR and investment regulations to mandate system interoperability and performance audits.

Way Forward (Five Tactical Steps):

  1. Build a National Transport Data Framework — standardizing data governance across DGCA, AirNav, and AP Indonesia.
  2. Expand Digital Infrastructure — integrate GA flight support with commercial slot systems.
  3. Professionalize Human Capital — develop i.e. modular Pilotpreneur curricula blending flight and entrepreneurship skills.
  4. Launch a Regulatory Sandbox — allow startups and operators to test innovations in scheduling, fuel management, and logistics.
  5. Establish Continuous Monitoring — implement a unified GA performance dashboard measuring efficiency, safety, and sustainability.

Through these actionable steps, Indonesia can realize a GA ecosystem that is lean, smart, and sustainable — mirroring the collaborative spirit of gotong royong in the air.

Closing

The future of Indonesian aviation lies not in expansion but integration. General Aviation can catalyse local economies, strengthen national resilience, and foster a new generation of pilotpreneurs — without adding bureaucratic weight. The foundation already exists. The next leap is to connect it through digital transparency, shared infrastructure, and coherent policy.

If executed with unified governance, Indonesia’s GA sector could combine Seletar’s precision, Dubai’s ambition, and America’s inclusiveness — all within the spirit of efficiency, effectiveness, applicability, and implement-ability that defines modern public management.

References
FAA (2023). Economic Impact of General Aviation in the U.S.
ICAO (2024). Air Transport DataPlus – General Aviation Indicators.
Bappenas (2024). Aviation Transformation 2045: Regulatory and Institutional Reform Framework.

Dr. Afen Sena, M.Si. IAP, FRAeS
Dr. Afen Sena, M.Si. IAP, FRAeS
Profesional dan akademis dengan sejarah kerja, pendidikan dan pelatihan di bidang penerbangan dan bisnis kedirgantaraan. Alumni PLP/ STPI/ PPI Curug, Doktor Manajemen Pendidikan dari Universitas Negeri Jakarta, International Airport Professional (IAP) dari ICAO-ACI AMPAP dan Fellow Royal Aeronautical Society (FRAeS).
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