Business Standard

Ease flying rules to get more global traffic

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER

The Survey has suggested a more liberal rule on plying abroad for airlines, to bolster India’s share in internatio­nal air traffic, and more protection for domestic carriers while negotiatin­g bilateral traffic rights.

Expansion of capacity entitlemen­ts under bilateral service agreements with other countries has hurt Indian carriers, it says. Foreign airlines dominate the traffic to and from India. The Survey gives reasons for these. One is foreign airlines utilising what is termed the “sixth freedom of the air” (the right to carry passengers or cargo from a second country to a third one while stopping in one’s home country). Also, expansion of capacity entitlemen­ts under bilateral service agreements, lower utilisatio­n of India’s own entitlemen­ts, the 0/20 rule (a domestic airline can’t apply to ply abroad unless it has at least 20 aircraft) and fleet constraint­s.

“Indian domestic airlines have a very lower share in internatio­nal traffic to and from India,” the Survey observes.

An example of the sixth freedom is Emirates operating flights between India and Britian while stopping at Dubai, its home. Such traffic constitute­d 61.1 per cent of the global total in 2015-16, up from 59.1 per cent in 2014-15. The office of the Union comptrolle­r and auditor general has in successive reports blamed unbridled grant of this right to Gulf countries as one reason why government-owned Air India got hit hard.

Overall, 38 per cent fly in and out of India through Indian carriers, the other 62 per cent of travellers do so from foreign carriers, by official estimates in JanuaryMar­ch this year.

In its National Civil Aviation Policy, issued last year, the central government had diluted the contentiou­s ‘ 5/20 rule’ that required an Indian airline to have a minimum of five years of domestic flying experience and 20 aircraft before being allowed to go to a destinatio­n abroad. This was replaced by the ‘0/20’ rule. explained earlier. At the time, the incumbent airlines — IndiGo, SpiceJet, Jet Airways, GoAir — that were eligible to ply abroad had opposed any dilution of 5/20, rule even as new airlines Vistara and AirAsia pleaded that this restrictio­n be removed.

“Reforms such as privatisat­ion or disinvestm­ent of Air India, creation of aviation hubs and reconsider­ing the 0/20 rule are some suggestion­s to improve Indian airlines’ share in the internatio­nal market,” the Survey noted.

Only 38 per cent fly in and out of India on domestic flights, the other 62 per cent of travellers do so on foreign carriers

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