‘India has not yet signed off on an undisclosed package
agreed between Air India and Boeing’
New Delhi: Three of Boeing’s cutting-edge 787 Dreamliners
painted in Air India colours are parked in South Carolina, waiting for the
ailing state carrier to pay for them and take possession.
The 787, which promises to help modernize Air India’s
ageing fleet, has instead been a source of several headaches for the
money-losing carrier.
The three planes, the first of which was ready for
delivery at the end of May, are caught up in a dispute between the US
planemaker and India over compensation to the airline after production was
delayed by four years.
India has not yet signed off on an undisclosed package
agreed between Air India and Boeing, according to a senior government official
directly involved in the process.
“We still do not have inputs from several ministries, including
departments like expenditure secretary in the finance ministry. So the process
is getting delayed,” the official said on Wednesday, declining to be
identified.
Air India has ordered 27 Dreamliners in total and was to
be the first non-Japanese carrier to take possession of the long-haul plane,
whose carbon-composite construction makes it more fuel-efficient than earlier
models.
At list prices, the three planes have a combined value of
about $580 million, although discounts are common. They are being financed by
Standard Chartered Bank.
“Three Dreamliners are ready for delivery and are parked
at Charleston, South Carolina. We are just waiting for Air India to receive
those,” said Dinesh Keskar, Boeing’s vice president of sales and marketing for
Asia-Pacific and India.
The Dreamliners are part of orders totalling $6 billion
made by Air India in 2005, stretching already constrained finances that
subsequently required a $5.8 billion government bailout.
More recently, the right to fly the 787 was at the heart
of a 58-day strike by a group of about 500 pilots.
The striking pilots had demanded that their colleagues
from the former Indian Airlines, the domestic state-run carrier that merged
with Air India, not be trained to fly Dreamliners because they worried it could
hurt their own career prospects.
The first of the three planes, showcased at an air show
earlier this year in India, was ready for delivery in late May, and Air India
sent a group of pilots to take delivery.
Those pilots flew back as passengers after Air India and
Boeing could not agree on compensation, two sources with direct knowledge of
the matter said.
The cabinet committee on economic affairs (CCEA) must
approve the compensation but has been without a head since Pranab Mukherjee
stepped down as finance minister last month to run for the largely ceremonial
post of president.
“I hope we will have a decision within this month,” said
another senior government official, declining to be identified.
http://www.livemint.com/2012/07/11192940/Air-India-Boeing-Dreamliners-g.html
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