Wednesday, 26 September 2012

No fresh airline licence for now

Govt to review decision after demand assessment

The euphoria over the government’s decision to permit foreign carriers up to 49 per cent stake in domestic skies will be tempered, with the civil aviation ministry deciding not to give fresh licences to set up a greenfield airline for the time being.
Speaking to Business Standard Civil Aviation Minister Ajit Singh said, “We are not giving licences for greenfield airlines.
As of now, FDI (foreign direct investment) in aviation can come only through existing airlines.” Under the current policy, a start-up airline has to get a no-objection certificate from the ministry, tantamount to a licence.
After that, it has to get a scheduled operator’s permit. The DGCA (directorate general of civil aviation) also has to clear the airline’s security preparedness.
Singh said another call would be taken once the ministry, working on an “aircraft acquisition policy”, evaluated demand for planes in relation to the estimated passenger growth and orders placed by domestic carriers.
On the one hand, the move limits the choice of foreign carriers to only three-four Indian companies looking for foreign equity — mainly, SpiceJet, GoAir and Kingfisher Airlines.
But, on the other hand, it provides breathing space to domestic carriers such as Air India to put their operations in order.
The Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation (Capa) projects the Indian aviation industry will more than treble over the next decade, emerging the third largest market in the world.
Capa’s India head Kapil Kaul says, “It takes about $100 million to start an airline.
There are many in India who would be ready to invest $50 million and tie up with carriers such as Air Asia, Jet Star and Tiger Airways.”
AIRCRAFT ORDERS BY DOMESTIC CARRIERS
Airline
Order
 Delivery time
GoAir
72
A320 NEO
2016-20 (17 A320 deliveries till 2016)
IndiGo
221
A320
2015 (of which 150  A320 NEO and
30  A320 to be delivered post 2015)
Jet Airways
4
A330-300
Nov 2012 to Feb 2013
5
A330-200
Oct 2013 to Aug 2015
31
Boeing 737-800
July 2012 to Dec 2017
10
Boeing 787
Feb 2014 to Aug 2015
5
ATR 72-600
Nov 2012 to Apr 2013
SpiceJet
30
Boeing
2014-19

3
Bombardier Q400
2012-13
Air India
27
Boeing 787
2012-16
Boeing projects Indian airlines will need 1,450 new aircraft over 2012 to 2031, valued at $175 billion
Source: Companies

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