Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Aviation industry may take a big hit: Govt note

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from budget carriers Indigo, Spicejet, Goair and Air Asia. Apart from these airlines, there are some small airlines that, along with Indigo, operate on routes under the Udaan scheme, meant to improve regional air connectivi­ty and make air travel affordable to the masses..

Kapil Kaul, CEO of aviation consultanc­y Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation (CAPA) - India, said: “The entire civil aviation sector is at a breaking point. CAPA expects domestic traffic to decline by over 60% and internatio­nal traffic by 70-80 % in financial year 2021. Work force impact is likely to be over 30% for the entire aviation sector. Airlines are expected to have around 250 surplus aircraft in the current financial year. We expect the industry to see pre-covid traffic only by the end of financial year 2023.”

According to aviation regulator Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation, domestic air passenger traffic slumped 82.3% in July compared with the same month a year ago. From January to July, airlines carried a total of 37.28 million passengers, a decline of 54.84% compared to the correspond­ing period a year ago.

The aviation ministry has restarted domestic flights in many major routes and while scheduled internatio­nal flights are still not allowed, it has created bilateral travel bubbles and allowed special repatriati­on flights both by Indian carriers and foreign airliners to carry stranded citizens back home.

At present the centre has allowed only 45% capacity utilisatio­n on domestic routes. Domestic flights were allowed to resume from May 25, two months after a blanket suspension since the first lockdown was announced. The Centre has also extended the suspension of internatio­nal flights until August 31.

“Traffic projection­s will depend entirely on the behaviour of the Covid-19 disease. Our traffic footfall is slowly picking up each month now since the lockdown (ended). As on August 16, there were 947 departure flights ferrying 93,639 passengers. Comparing the numbers from July 16 where there were 783 departure flights ferrying 61,772 passengers, there has been a big improvemen­t . We are expecting it to pick up significan­tly over the next two three months,” civil aviation ministry spokespers­on Rajeev Jain said.

The ministry’s note added that greater clarity will emerge in the next few months; and that the potential impact of Covid-19 on the aviation sector will depend on the intensity, duration and spread of the viral disease.

According to credit rating agency CRISIL, Indian airlines will face a revenue loss of ~1.3 lakh crore between fiscal 2020 and 2022 because of the pandemic. According to the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA), airlines in the Asia-pacific region will be the hardest hit by the health crisis, with losses expected to be around $29 billion for 2020. This is more than a third of the $84.3 billion industry losses globally.

For India alone, IATA expected passenger demand in 2020 to shrink by 49% compared to last year.

The potential impact on employment in the aviation and sectors dependent on it could be to the tune of 3 million jobs.

Goa

Karnataka

Kerala

 ?? SANJEEV VERMA/HT PHOTO ?? Passengers at IGI Airport during the Covid-19 lockdown in New Delhi. n
SANJEEV VERMA/HT PHOTO Passengers at IGI Airport during the Covid-19 lockdown in New Delhi. n

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