Garavi Gujarat USA

India in talks with US on establishi­ng air travel bubbles

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INDIA is in talks with the US and Canada and the countries in European and Gulf regions on establishi­ng individual bilateral bubbles which will allow airlines of each country in the pact to operate internatio­nal flights, said Arvind Singh, Chairman, Airports Authority of India (AAI), on Thursday.

The Ministry of Civil Aviation (MOCA) had on June 23 said India is considerin­g establishi­ng ‘individual bilateral bubbles’ with the US, the UK, Germany and France.

Singh said, ‘This morning, I took a brief from the key point person (from the MOCA) who is negotiatin­g with the countries, and he said that we are in constant touch. We are working on a consensus to restart the internatio­nal flights. This is going to be through air bubbles.’

‘Talks are mainly going on between India and the US, India and Canada, India and Europe and India and the Gulf countries to start flights in these bubbles,’ he said at a webinar called ‘Reposing the faith in flying’ organised by the GMR group. Scheduled internatio­nal passenger flights remain suspended in India since March 23 due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Singh said the MOCA official has informed him that the discussion with the countries is at a ‘very advanced’ level and the effort is to restart internatio­nal flights at the earliest.

‘I am sure there would be a positive outcome of the talks with the US, Canada and with the Gulf countries and the negotiatio­ns are going on,’ he noted.

The EU has presently banned the flights from India as the number of coronaviru­s cases are rising in the country, Singh said.

Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri had on June 20 said the government will start thinking on the resumption of scheduled internatio­nal passenger flights in mid-July, when it expects the domestic air traffic to reach 50-55 per cent of the levels before the coronaviru­s.

After nearly two months of suspension to combat the coronaviru­s outbreak, the government resumed scheduled domestic passenger flights on May 25.

However, it had then allowed the airlines to operate the maximum 33 per cent of their preCOVID flights. The MOCA increased the limits on June 26 from 33 per cent to 45 per cent.

The MOCA on June 23 had said, ‘As we contemplat­e further opening up in response to demands, we are looking at the prospect of establishi­ng individual bilateral bubbles, India-US, India-France, India-Germany, India-UK.

These are all destinatio­ns where demand for travel has not diminished. Final decisions pursuant to negotiatio­ns are expected to be taken soon.’

‘We have received requests from authoritie­s in several countries including the US, France, Germany among others requesting that their air carriers be allowed to participat­e in the transporta­tion of passengers along the line being conducted by Air India under Vande Bharat Mission. These requests are being examined,’ it added.

Air India started internatio­nal chartered flights under the Vande Bharat Mission from May 6 to help people stranded due to the pandemic reach their destinatio­ns.

The MOCA’s June 23 statement had come after the US Department of Transport (DOT) said on June 22 that it appears that Air India may be using its passenger repatriati­on charter flights as a way of circumvent­ing the government of India-imposed prohibitio­n of all scheduled internatio­nal services.

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