Gulf News

Nepal’s flag carrier considers major network expansion

Expansion to boost tourism sector hit by April earthquake

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The flag carrier of the tiny Himalayan nation of Nepal is considerin­g a major network expansion in an effort to help revitalise the country’s tourism industry.

Visitor numbers to Nepal fell by 32 per cent in 2015 after a series of earthquake­s that year killed thousands and raised safety concerns.

The country has since prioritise­d developmen­ts in its tourism industry, a major economic contributo­r, and the state-controlled Nepal Airlines is looking at more than doubling its internatio­nal network to 19 destinatio­ns. It has announced it is resuming flights to Dubai on August 18 after a four-year hiatus and is to start flights to Guangzhou in China in October and then Dammam in Saudi Arabia.

The plans include starting flights to Osaka or Tokyo in Japan and Seoul in South Korea once it receives two Airbus A330s in late December, managing director Sugat Ratna Kansakar told Gulf News on Thursday.

Air service agreements

“Our immediate target is to have a direct flight from Kathmandu to Japan and Kathmandu to South Korea … we already have air service agreements,” he said in a phone interview.

Meanwhile, the airline is considerin­g whether it should launch flights to Beijing, Chengdu, Kunming and Shanghai in China, and to Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Tibet.

Nepal Airlines wants to target destinatio­ns where there is significan­t Buddhist population­s. Nepal has several Buddhist pilgrimage sites including the birthplace of Buddha.

The airline also hopes that by expanding its own network, airfares to Nepal will become cheaper and more appealing to travellers.

“If we want to bring more and more tourists from Australia, New Zealand, America or Japan then we need to bring down the airfare,” Kansakar said. The expansion, however, will not take place overnight.

“We lack aircraft right now,” Kansakar said.

The airline currently has just four aircraft for internatio­nal flights: two new Airbus A320s and two out-of-production Boeing 757s, both narrow body aircraft.

The 757s will be sold by the time the A330s arrive 2017, Kansakar said.

Nepal Airlines plans to expand its fleet by “one or two” aircraft over the next “few years” and is currently in talks with Airbus to purchase either two more A320s or two A319s. As part of its expansion plans, the airline also wants to increase flights to India, where it in late already flies to Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru and will soon start flights to Kolkata, and to Thailand’s Bangkok.

Banned by European authoritie­s from flying to Europe over safety concerns, Kansakar said Nepal Airlines has held interline agreement talks with Emirates, Etihad Airways and Ethiopian Airlines.

Managing director, Nepal Airlines

 ??  ?? Nepal Airlines Airbus A320. The airline is considerin­g whether it should launch flights to Beijing, Chengdu, Kunming and Shanghai in China, and to Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Tibet.
Nepal Airlines Airbus A320. The airline is considerin­g whether it should launch flights to Beijing, Chengdu, Kunming and Shanghai in China, and to Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Tibet.
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