Higher
ticket prices and lower capacity led to a decline in the number of airline
passengers in June, according to various online travel portals.
The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), which is yet to
release the data for June, had said passengers flown by domestic airlines had
declined to 5.44 million in May 2012, against 5.49 million in the year-ago
period, a fall of one per cent. “Domestic passenger traffic seems to have
fallen about five per cent year-on-year because of increased fares, which are
30 per cent higher than last year,” said Sharat Dhall, President (online),
Yatra.Com.
Given online travel portals
account for 15-18 per cent of total domestic airline ticket sales, the overall
fall in airline passenger traffic could be about one per cent, said an aviation
expert.
Noel Swain, executive vice-president (supplier relations), Cleartrip.com,
said, “On an average, fares have risen 20 per cent, including the service tax.
Fares to/from Delhi have risen 26-27 per cent because of the imposition of a
user development fee. The industry was expecting four per cent growth in
domestic air passenger numbers in the quarter ended June. However, growth would
be flat or lower by one to two per cent. Traffic for June would be four-five
per cent less.”
Though Dhall did not specify the total number of seats offered by
airlines in June compared to seats offered in the year-ago period, according to
his estimates, the total supply volume would be about 25 per cent lower.
Vikram Malhi, Expedia’s country head, stated, “Domestic tourism
became a collateral beneficiary of the slide in the rupee, and April and May,
being the peak season, greatly benefited from this. However, despite the shift
in the focus of Indian travelers, compared to May, June saw the number of air
travelers fall 12-14 per cent.” This summer, airfares rose 15-20 per cent, he
added.
In 2011, the number of domestic passenger rose 16.6 per cent to
60.7 million, averaging 5.1 million passengers a month. This was 74 per cent
higher than 2006 levels, according to a Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation (Capa)
report released in December 2011. Capa expects domestic passenger traffic would
rise eight-10 per cent in 2012-13, while growth in capacity would be seven to
eight per cent, against 15.1 per cent in 2011-12.
Kingfisher Airlines has cut its capacity sharply, operating only
12-13 aircraft and 90-100 flights a day in its summer schedule. Last year, the
airline operated 66 aircraft. Now, its fleet size is down to 44. Jet Airways,
too, is not planning any capacity addition in narrow-bodied aircraft. “The
fleet will remain, more or less, the same for the next 12-24 months,” stated a
senior Jet executive.
In a research report last month, Rashesh Shah, an ICICI Securities
analyst, wrote, “The Indian aviation sector is entering a low-growth phase,
with passenger traffic moving into single-digit growth due to higher ticket
prices and last year’s high base effect. However, massive reduction by
Kingfisher and the ongoing Air India pilots issue continue to aid other private
carriers in maintaining healthy load f
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