Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

New turnaround plan for Air India is in works: Govt

- Gireesh Chandra Prasad

NEW DELHI: The government is working on a new turnaround plan for Air India Ltd (AI) and to permit domestic airlines to raise external commercial borrowings for working capital purposes, civil aviation secretary RN Choubey said on Thursday.

The plan will include infusing capital, adding new planes and more operationa­l autonomy for Air India’s board, considered a key hurdle for the state-run carrier in competing with private players. “We would like to make sure that Air India as a stateowned enterprise remains competitiv­e and its market share does not go down, which may require capacity induction,” Choubey said. “We will also ensure that sufficient delegation (of power) is given to the board of directors to decide on operationa­l matters,” Choubey said.

He declined to give details on the extent of capital infusion. “Discussion­s are going on with the finance ministry,” he said. Making AI competitiv­e to survive on its own has become an imperative as the government cannot indefinite­ly spend taxpayer funds to run the carrier when it requires financial resources for massive welfare plans such as health insurance for the poor and support price for winter crops announced in this year’s federal budget. Mint reported on Wednesday that federal policy think tank NITI Aayog favoured turning around the carrier before it is privatised so that the asset fetches better value.

Air India recently failed to attract investor interest when the government put it up for privatisat­ion as part of its strategy to sell state-owned loss-making enterprise­s. Higher jet fuel prices and the government’s plan to retain a 24% stake post disinvestm­ent damped investor enthusiasm.

AI has a 12.3% share of the domestic air travel market, falling from about 30% in 2002. The airline and its low-cost internatio­nal carrier Air India Express have 42.8% share of the internatio­nal traffic to and from India among Indian carriers.

Meanwhile, Choubey said airlines are currently allowed to raise external commercial borrowings for non-working capital purposes and the civil aviation ministry is keen that the scope is expanded.

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