Business Today

Better Late Than Never

INDIA HAS JUST BEGUN TO EXPLOIT THE BENEFITS THAT MODERN AIRPORTS OFFER.

- The writer is former Executive Director of Air India and author of The Descent of Air India BY JITENDER BHARGAVA

On October 15, 1932, when J.R.D. Tata landed his single-engine De Havilland Puss Moth aircraft at Mumbai’s Juhu airstrip – to herald the birth of civil aviation in India – it had no terminal building or any other parapherna­lia generally associated with aerodromes, as they were then called.

Since then, India has come a long way, albeit at a pace that has virtually negated the head start that Tata provided the country.

This was because government­s in that era considered the aviation industry to be elitist. No significan­t investment­s were made in creating the infrastruc­ture that could make our airports global hubs considerin­g that India was advantageo­usly placed geographic­ally – 8-10 hours of flying time from both the UK and Europe in the west and Japan in the east. This was when jets could fly only 10-odd hours non-stop before ultra-long-haul aircraft came on the horizon less than two decades ago.

India’s loss as a global hub, where internatio­nal passengers could convenient­ly change flights, was a gain for those who showed foresight. First Singapore, followed by Hong Kong, Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur in the east, and Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Qatar and Istanbul on the west of India, gained.

The fact that we lacked vision for exploiting the potential that India had was evident in the standard of our airports. The Airports Authority of India and its earlier avatars – Internatio­nal Airports Authority of India and National Airports Authority (for exclusivel­y managing domestic airports) believed in presenting to airlines and passengers only very basic facilities rather than a holistic experience that passengers were increasing­ly getting accustomed to in major world cities.

Thanks to the belated realisatio­n of government­s since 2000, a spectacula­r change has been witnessed in India. Our airports, particular­ly the ones created in Delhi and Mumbai through private entreprene­urship, now rank among the best in the world. Ironically, though, our planners once again overlooked the growth potential that India offered as a result of which the optimal handling capacity has been achieved at new airports much earlier than envisaged.

Globally, countries, especially those in our neighbourh­ood, have been commencing groundwork on newer airports as soon as the one under constructi­on is completed, many of them with multiple runways. But lethargy, compounded by political and bureaucrat­ic considerat­ions, has taken a huge toll here. The new Mumbai airport planned in Navi Mumbai is a shining example of this. Initial work had not even been initiated at this proposed airport when the original year of commission­ing, 2014 – first envisaged – expired.

Better late than never, as they say. The planners have finally realised the catalytic role of aviation in economic developmen­t and hence, are now concentrat­ing not only on the developmen­t of new airports but also renovating hitherto unutilised airstrips for UDAN flights to charter a whole new course for the Indian aviation industry. Alas, only if what we are doing today with our airport infrastruc­ture would have been done some three decades ago.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH BY HEMANT CHAWLA ??
PHOTOGRAPH BY HEMANT CHAWLA
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