Business Standard

AI leases 6 more planes to expand int’l operations

- DEEPAK PATEL & ANEESH PHADNIS New Delhi/mumbai, 5 December

Tata Group-owned Air India on Monday said it has leased six more wide body B777-300ER planes to expand its internatio­nal flight operations.

This is in addition to 30 planes — 21 narrow body A320neo, four narrow body A321neo and five wide body B777-200LR — the carrier leased in September this year.

The 30 planes leased in September are expected to be inducted in the airline’s fleet by 2023-end and the other six by June 2023.

In addition to leasing these planes, Air India is in discussion­s with Boeing and Airbus to place a sizeable aircraft order to ensure future expansion.

The Tata group and Singapore Airlines (SIA) announced last week that Vistara will be merged into Air India to create a single full-service airline, with SIA holding a 25.1 per cent share in the new entity. Airasia India is already in the process of merging into Air India Express to create a single low-cost subsidiary of Air India.

Air India has been focusing on its internatio­nal expansion during the last few months. In

December, the carrier is scheduled to operate 809 internatio­nal flights per week, which is about 22 per cent more than what it operated in June, according to aviation analytics company Cirium’s data.

“These aircraft are expected to be inducted in the first half of 2023,” Air India said on

Monday. “Air India’s B777-300 ER will have four-class configurat­ion of first, business, premium economy and economy, and will be deployed to connect Indian Metro cities with more internatio­nal destinatio­ns,” it added.

A wide body plane has a bigger fuel tank, allowing it to operate non-stop on longer routes such as India-us and India-canada.

Campbell Wilson, CEO & managing director, Air India, said, “These additional (six) aircraft leases will support our near-term growth even as we finalise plans to refresh and significan­tly grow our long-term fleet.”

Brendan Sobie of consultanc­y firm Sobie Aviation, said, “Air India can access Russian airspace, which gives it an advantage on long-haul flights to North America, and does not have some of the manpower or other issues that airlines face in other markets,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India