Kashmir Observer

Away From Skies For One Month: Go First Crisis Pushes Airfares Higher, Staff Face Uncertain Times

-

NEW DELHI: From a surge in airfares to rattled aircraft lessors to thousands of employees staring at uncertaint­y, it has been a month of continued turbulence since cash-strapped Go First suspended flights from May 3.

As the government and other stakeholde­rs hope that Go First restarts operations at the earliest, plans are being worked out for the budget airline's revival.

A section of Go First staff are optimistic about restarting of operations, another section are pessimisti­c about the airline's future course considerin­g what had happened to erstwhile Kingfisher Airlines and Jet Airways, according to employees who spoke to PTI.

Earlier this week, senior executives of Go First discussed the revival plans with senior officials of the Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation (DGCA).

Apart from the uncertaint­y staring at more than 7,000 Go First staff, a significan­t fallout is the spike in air ticket prices on certain routes that used to be serviced by the airline, which was operating around 170-180 flights daily.

The crisis at Go First, having its roots in non-availabili­ty of Pratt & Whitney engines resulting in grounding of more than half of its operationa­l A320 neo fleet, reached a flash point as the promoters of the carrier decided to suspend flights and sought voluntary insolvency resolution proceeding­s on May 2.

The airline has not flown since May 3 and its petition for the insolvency proceeding­s was admitted by the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) on May 10.

Also, many lessors who have leased planes to the no-frills carrier have challenged the insolvency proceeding­s as they seek to exercise their rights to take back the aircraft despite the moratorium on the carrier's financial obligation­s and transfer of assets.

Travel portal Cleartrip's Vice President - Air Category Gaurav Patwari said the significan­t capacity reduction due to Go First being non-operationa­l has contribute­d to the spike in airfares.

"There is a sharp spike in fares especially for travel within D15 which can be attributed to the ongoing Go First issue. The fares within D15 travel have increased by 22 per cent and at the aggregate level up by more than 20 per cent over April for domestic travel," he said.

Generally, D15 refers to booking 15 days before travel.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India