New Straits Times

Philippine­s looks to female pilots to help Asia’s travel boom

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MANILA: The Philippine­s’ largest flight school is trying to bring more women into the cockpit to help meet a shortage of pilots in Asia.

At Alpha Aviation Group’s campus in Pampanga province north of the capital, one in five of its 550 students each year are women, whereas only about three per cent of the world’s pilots are female, said founder Bhanu Choudhrie.

Choudhrie said the group holds recruitmen­t programmes at universiti­es and invites female pilots to give career talks to students to encourage more women to apply.

These initiative­s aim to dispel the notion in the Philippine­s that only men can apply to flight school, he added.

Boeing Co estimates Asia will require 266,000 more pilots by 2038 — a third of the global shortage, as travel booms faster in the region than anywhere else.

Understaff­ed airlines in the region have already been forced to cut flights due to the shortage. Some local carriers are setting up their own academies to produce more pilots.

Given widespread usage of English in the Philippine­s, the country is well placed to cater to regional low-cost carriers, which are now required by regulators to train their pilots in the language, Choudhrie said.

The school already trains pilots for local carriers, as well as VietJet Air and AirAsia India.

The rise of low-cost carriers, which mostly fly short-haul flights within the region, also makes a career as a pilot more attractive for women who don’t want to be away from home for long periods of time, said Choudhrie.

“There is huge demand and men alone can’t fill that.

“It’s the women who will be the ones to drive this growth,” he said.

 ?? BLOOMBERG PIC ?? The rise of low-cost carriers, which mostly fly short-haul flights within Asia, make a career as a pilot more attractive for women.
BLOOMBERG PIC The rise of low-cost carriers, which mostly fly short-haul flights within Asia, make a career as a pilot more attractive for women.

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