Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Centre may sweeten Air India deal

- Rajeev Jayaswal letters@hindustant­imes.com

THE GOVERNMENT HAS ALREADY TRIMMED THE DEBT LIABILITY THAT A BUYER WOULD NEED TO ASSUME BY MORE THAN HALF

NEW DELHI: The government may defer the planned sale of Air India by up to three years until the turbulence caused in the aviation industry by the Covid-19 pandemic eases, two persons aware of the developmen­t said. Another option under considerat­ion is sweetening the deal by reducing the Air India debt liability that a prospectiv­e buyer of the airline would assume.

Experts engaged in the process of divesting Air India have pointed to the lukewarm response by investors to the existing offer on the table and suggested that the government consider extending the October 30 deadline for submission of bids,reduce the debt liability of ₹23,286 crore or allow bidders to place a value on the government’s equity stake and say how much how much debt they would assume, the two persons said on condition of anonymity.

The government has already trimmed the debt liability that a buyer would need to assume by more than half. It has extended the deadline for bid submission­s four times. The other options before the government is to defer the national airline’s sale by two to three years to let the investment climate improve or wind up its operations, the two persons cited above said.

“The option of allowing bidders to quote both debt and equity value appears practical in the current domestic and global business environmen­t, but a final call will be taken by the competent authority,” one of the two persons said.

A group of secretarie­s is expected to discuss the topic again this week before the matter is referred to a ministeria­l panel headed by home minister Amit Shah to take a final call, the persons said. Other members of the panel, called Air India Specific Alternativ­e Mechanism (AISAM), are the ministers for finance, commerce and aviation.

The government has already trimmed the debt liability of a potential buyer. It decided to transfer a significan­t portion of the total ₹60,074 crore debt of

Air India to a special purpose vehicle, Air India Assets Holding Ltd, and limited the debt exposure that a buyer would face to ₹23,286 crore.

The finance ministry and the Department of Investment and Public Asset Management did not respond to email queries seeking comment. Participat­ing in a debate on the Aircraft (Amendment) Bill, 2020 in the Rajya Sabha on Tuesday, Hardeep S Puri, minister of state for civil aviation, said a sale is the last resort to keep Air India alive. “With ₹60,000 crore debt, some of my colleagues must realise that the choice is between privatisat­ion and closing down.”

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