The fare of one-way tickets from Delhi shot up to almost Rs 30,000.
Just
as passengers were dealing with delays and disruptions at Delhi's
Indira Gandhi International Airport due to repairs on one of the
three runways since yesterday, November 15, they were hit with dearer
spot airfares in and out of Delhi. Adding to the woes, about 100
daily flights have also been cancelled for the next eight days,
according to The Times of India report.
As
seen on various travel apps and websites, the fare of one-way tickets
from Delhi shot up to almost Rs 30,000. For example, the Delhi-Mumbai
flight airfares showed high airfares ranging from Rs 15,000 to Rs
29,000 on travel portals.
November
16 flight fares from Delhi
Mumbai-
Rs 9,427 - Rs 28,974
Kolkata-
Rs 11,401 - Rs 31,425
Chennai
- Rs 8,303 - Rs 28,712
Bengaluru
- Rs 17,752 - Rs 29,447
Hyderabad
- Rs 9,773 - Rs 21,870
Source:
MakeMytrip.com
“Spot
fares in some sectors have gone up by up to 100 per cent as it is
weekend and the inventory of lower advance purchase-priced tickets
has been sold out. What is available for spot sale is the higher
category fares. With close to 100 flights less per day when the
runway will be shut (Nov 16-23), the demand-supply mismatch has added
to higher fares,” A Kalsi of Delhi’s Ambe Travels told TOI.
One
of IGIA's runways will be closed for repairs for 13 days starting
Thursday, according to a communication. The airport, operated by
DIAL, is the busiest aerodrome in the country. Runway 27/09 would be
closed for "preventive repairs" next month while two other
runways -- 11/29 and 10/28 -- would be operational.
The
airport handled 63.5 million passengers in 2017-18. The airport has
around 1,300 flight movements every day.
In
a statement, DIAL said it was planning the closure of runway 27/09 to
carry out preventive repairs.
"The
works are scheduled to be undertaken for 13-day duration starting
from November 15, 2018. This will lower the capacity of IGI
Airport by 50 arrivals and 50 departures per day in this
duration," a DIAL spokesperson said.
Business Standard
No comments:
Post a Comment