South Korea’s flag carrier Korean Air has deployed a new aviation software platform at its Engine Maintenance Centre, to modernise maintenance operations ahead of a planned large-scale maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) expansion.
The implementation of Ramco Aviation Suite is designed to streamline engine maintenance workflows, improve visibility into operations, and support the airline’s upcoming engine maintenance cluster, scheduled to open in 2027.
The platform integrates functions across maintenance, finance, billing, and customer support, while also connecting with internal systems such as automated storage and external partner networks.
Chan Woo Jung, Senior Vice President and Head of Maintenance & Engineering Division at Korean Air, said the initiative marks a critical milestone in the airline’s digital journey.
For Korean Air, the emphasis is on improving coordination across complex maintenance processes rather than adding new standalone tools. The deployed system provides insights into capacity utilisation, production throughput, and financial performance, areas that are becoming increasingly critical as airlines look to optimise MRO operations amid cost pressures and rising fleet complexity.
In a push toward paperless operations, more than 400 mechanics and engineers are now using Ramco’s mobile application to execute maintenance tasks digitally. The shift is aimed at reducing manual processes, cutting queue times, and accelerating turnaround cycles.
The move comes as Korean Air ramps up its long-term MRO strategy. The upcoming maintenance cluster is expected to significantly expand its engine overhaul capacity, building on decades of experience in servicing both its own fleet and third-party airlines.
Industry-wide, airlines are increasingly investing in digital MRO platforms to improve asset utilisation, reduce downtime, and enable predictive maintenance, especially as supply chain constraints and aircraft availability continue to impact operations.
Korean Air’s latest rollout signals a shift toward more data-driven maintenance environments, where operational decisions are increasingly guided by real-time insights rather than manual reporting.




