Showing posts with label AVIATION SECTOR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AVIATION SECTOR. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

DGCA allows 870 chartered flights, ferrying of 200,000 people amid lockdown


These charted flights were foreign airlines transporting stranded people to their destinations amid coronavirus lockdown.


The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) on Monday said that in addition to facilitating the Vande Bharat Mission, it granted permission to around 870 chartered flights, transporting around 200,000 passengers, both inbound and outbound.
These charted flights were foreign airlines transporting stranded people to their destinations amid coronavirus lockdown.

"In addition to facilitating the Vande Bharat Mission, DGCA granted permission to around 870 chartered flights, transporting around 200,000 passengers, both inbound and outbound. Several Airlines helped in the humanitarian mission of taking stranded people to their destinations," tweeted the DGCA.

In another tweet informing about the airline taking part in the operations, the DGCA said, "Major airlines including Qatar Airways-81, KLM Dutch-68, Kuwait Air-41, British Airways-39, FlyDubai-38, Air France-32, Jazeera-30, Air Arabia-20, Gulf Air-19, Sri Lankan-19, Biman Bangladesh-15, Korean Air-14, Delta-13, Saudia-13 and Air Nippon-12 took part in the operations."

"Additionally, Airlines like Air New Zealand-12, Thai Air Asia-11, United Airlines-11, Iraqi Airways-11, Oman Air-10, Ural Airlines-9, Lufthansa-8, Somon Air-8, Condour-8, Emirates-5, Etihad-5, Aeroflot-4 & Virgin Atlantic-4 also took part in the chartered operations," the DGCA said in another tweet.


Tuesday, January 1, 2019

Airlines get a flying start in 2019 as jet fuel price is slashed by 14%


This is the second consecutive drop in jet fuel price and the sharpest cut since November 2008.


The new year began on a positive note for domestic airlines as state oil marketing companies slashed aviation turbine fuel (ATF) price by 14.7 per cent. This is the second consecutive drop in jet fuel price and the sharpest cut since November 2008.
A kilolitre of ATF will now cost Rs 58,060 in Delhi compared to Rs 68,050.

The revision brings relief to domestic airlines which have been struggling to make profit because of a rise in operating costs. Fuel accounts for around 40 per cent of the expenses of domestic airlines. High fuel and depreciating rupee resulted in big losses for the three major airlines in the second quarter of FY19. Collectively, IndiGo, Jet Airways and SpiceJet posted loss of Rs 2,338 crore in the preceding quarter as crude oil price surged 50 per cent on a year-on-year basis.

In fact, in the first half of FY19, the listed airlines together lost around Rs 20 crore per day collectively registering a loss of Rs 3,640 crore, ICRA’s vice-president Kinjal Shah noted in a report last month

Crude oil prices, however, are on a decline over the last few weeks over concerns of a supply glut. Boeing expects crude price to remain around $60 per barrel in 2019.
Inability to pass on high costs has been another bane for domestic carriers. While domestic air traffic grew 19 per cent between January and November on a year-on-year basis, much of it has come on the back of low fares. Airlines have been discounting fares throughout the year to fill up seats or raise cash. Industry experts say fares are holding up now but could come under pressure due to capacity induction and seasonal weakness in February-March.

In its latest India market outlook released in December, Boeing said domestic airlines lost around Rs 1,120 per passengers in the April-June quarter of 2018 due to their inability to charge higher fares. In the same period in 2017, airlines had made a gain of Rs 199 per passenger flown. Airfares in the fast-growing Indian market are 10-15 per cent lower than break-even levels for airlines, Boeing’s senior vice-president, Asia-Pacific, Dinesh Keskar said.


He raised the long-term jet order forecast for the nation to a record high despite market challenges.

The 14 per cent cut in fuel price is a positive step. However, typically, we have seen fares drop as a result of over capacity,” a senior executive of a private airline said.
Alongside IndiGo, which has planned a 30 per cent increase in seat capacity in the next two quarters, SpiceJet will join the race of capacity induction with the airline inducting 26 aircraft by the end of this financial year which includes 18 Boeing 737 Max and eight 90-seater Q400.

In an investor note last week, brokerage IIFL said, “Industry capacity continues to grow at 18-19 per cent.

Business Standard