Scheduled carriers ferried 11.53 million passengers in September, compared to 11.79 million in August, showed data issued by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) on Thursday.
Business
Standard : Domestic
air passenger traffic declined for the fourth consecutive month
in September, amid a slowing economy and lean travel season.
Scheduled
carriers ferried 11.53 million passengers in September, compared to
11.79 million in August, showed data issued by the Directorate
General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) on Thursday. They had carried 11.90
million passengers in July.
“The
numbers are disappointing. They have pulled down our projection and
now we peg (yearly growth for 2019 at 4-6 per cent). The good news is
that we have managed to withstand the exit of Jet Airways and
maintained positive growth despite three months of negative or flat
growth,” said a DGCA official.
IndiGo
continued its dominance in Indian skies, carrying nearly one in every
two passengers. In doing so, it more than made up for lost ground in
August. Its market share rose to
48.2
per cent from 47 per cent in August. It was 47.8 per cent in July. On
the back of reasonable growth in the first five months of the
calendar year, traffic for domestic airlines from January-September
was still higher by 3 per cent, rising to 105.89 million, against
102.79 million in the same period last year, according to DGCA.
“The
loss in fleet, on account of Jet
Airways, has largely been recovered and we expect an all-time
high fleet of above 616 aircraft in a month’s time. With more
aircraft joining by December 31, we expect a return to double-digit
growth early next year," the official added.
The
Delhi-based airline carried 5.56 million passengers in September,
while SpiceJet flew close to 1.7 million passengers, notching up 14.7
per cent market share.
The
Ajay Singh-owned airline’s market share fell from 15.5 per cent
last month. Air India improved its share by 20 basis points to 13 per
cent, flying nearly 1.5 million passengers during the period.
However,
an executive of a private airline said even though volume picked up,
it will be difficult for airlines to make money as fares have
remained low even during festive season.
"Even
during the peak Durga Puja period, fares have not gone higher than Rs
5,000. Therefore, it will be quite difficult time for airlines,"
he said.
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