Hindustan Times (East UP)

IndiGo recovering from ‘carnage’, may rehire

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MUMBAI: IndiGo, India’s biggest airline, could start slowly rehiring staff in three months as capacity rebuilds from “the background of carnage” caused by Covid-19, with domestic services likely to return to pre-pandemic levels by January or February, chief executive Ronojoy Dutta said.

“Doom and gloom is off the table and we are recovering pretty nicely, especially domestical­ly,” Dutta said in an interview with Bloomberg Television on Wednesday. The recovery in internatio­nal capacity will take longer due to quarantine­s and virus flareups in places such as the UK, but the airline is hoping it will be back to normal levels by the end of 2021, according to Dutta.

IndiGo, which has some 730 Airbus SE A320neo planes on order, laid off about 10% of its workforce due to the pandemic-driven slowdown. The carrier, operated by InterGlobe Aviation Ltd, still sees “a lot of room” for growth in internatio­nal routes, particular­ly those of about six hours duration that can be served by single-aisle narrowbody aircraft, Dutta said. India’s hubs are well positioned, he said. “We are anxious to get back into the internatio­nal game in a big way and we have lots of plans for rapid growth,” he said.

Rather than having too many planes on order, IndiGo may have not ordered enough given the huge growth potential for air travel in India as the middle class expands and more people start to fly, Dutta said. The company is in early discussion­s with engine manufactur­ers for planes due for delivery from 2024.

The chief executive said IndiGo, which in August announced a share sale to bring in as much as ₹4,000 crore ($540 million), isn’t looking to raise more funds. The company’s strategy remains focused on reducing costs and rapidly growing its operations, Dutta said.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? IndiGo remains focused on reducing costs and rapidly growing its operations, chief executive Ronojoy Dutta says.
BLOOMBERG IndiGo remains focused on reducing costs and rapidly growing its operations, chief executive Ronojoy Dutta says.

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