Indian Air Transport Growth Threatened by Pilot, Slot
Shortages
Pilot shortages and decreasing slots at the congested
metropolitan airports in Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, and Hyderabad have led Indian
air carriers to start to reduce capacity and increase fares. Forecasters project
India's domestic traffic to grow this year by 14 to 16 percent, to 165 million
passengers, and international traffic to increase 10 to 12 percent, to around 77
million. However, present constraints threaten to stymie the expansion
trends.
At a recent summit in Delhi, aviation consultancy CAPA-Centre for
Aviation noted that India will need to add 17,000 pilots to its inventory of
7,963 in the next decade. "There is a 15 to 20 percent shortage of commanders,"
said Kapil Kaul, CAPA CEO for India and the Middle East. "We [also] require 50
to 63 simulators in the country by 2028." Further, he said, present flight
training schools need to upgrade their old trainer aircraft. "You can get
quality pilots only with good training," he noted, adding that the country also
lacks maintenance training schools; India has added just one school to its
modest complement of 50 institutions since 2009.
Meanwhile, fleet
additions show no sign of abating. Last year, budget carriers added 21.2 million
seats, two-thirds of which IndiGo alone contributed. Budget carriers control a
70 percent share of India's domestic market, according to CAPA Advisory and
Research. The skills shortage will be become more acute by 2020, as Indian
carriers add 90 aircraft, taking the fleet to 754. IndiGo plans to add at least
40 more aircraft in the year ending March 31, 2020, after inducting about 62
this year. The airline, which also operates ATR turboprops on regional routes,
has placed orders for 530 Airbus A320-family narrowbodies.
While IndiGo
has not officially acknowledged it faces a shortage of pilots, it confirmed it
plans to cancel 30 flights per day until March 31, not including those involving
Notams issued by various airports due to operational reasons.
"Pilots
have been known to be an issue when synchronizing delivery of new aircraft
deliveries," said Vishok Mansingh, CEO of Mumbai-based aviation consultancy CAV
Aero. "This is a temporary phase for IndiGo. With 1,300 flights a day, it is a
reduction of only 1.3 percent. The schedules can easily be rationalized."
However, he added that shortages of captains stand to slow the growth of Indian
aviation as a whole because "a gestation period of four months is required to
produce captains."
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