Indian
carriers may ground more aircraft
With airlines from India withdrawing from China and on Monday Qatar not
allowing travellers from India to enter, the number of aircraft operated by
Indian carriers that will have to be grounded will increase dramatically.
On March 6, Kuwait "temporarily suspended" all flights from seven
countries, including India, for a week. The decision has been taken as a
"preventive measure due to the spread of coronavirus worldwide. There is
another school of thought which says that as many as four to five widebody
aircraft of Indian carriers could be grounded. A widebody aircraft is generally
an aircraft which can seat over 250 passengers and fly long distance like
flying from India to Europe or America non-stop.
Among the Indian airlines that fly to Kuwait are Air India and Air India
Express.
IndiGo, Air India
It is estimated that between 6 and 8 Indian aircraft, a combination of wide-body
and narrow-body aircraft operated by Indian carriers will get affected by the
restrictions on movement of Indians by Qatar and Indian carriers' decision to
withdraw services from countries like China. Among the India airlines that fly
to China and have withdrawn their services are IndiGo and Air India.
Explaining how an airline deploys its aircraft, a senior network planner said
that on an India-China route the aircraft is used for up to 11 hours a day.
"The flight is about 5 hours each way and includes one hour of ground time
in China. If the aircraft has an early morning departure from India then it
will be back by late evening and could probably be used for operating a
domestic flight. But if it is a hopping flight say doing India-China-Japan-India
then aircraft will be out for longer than 12 hours and will not be available to
do any India operations. Now these aircraft will have to sit on the ground or
if they are used to operate another flight then the chances are the aircraft
which was used earlier to mount the flight will be grounded," the network
planner explained.
Challenges ahead
With China operations suspended till June, an airline will find it difficult to
redeploy the aircraft as redeploying from the international to the domestic
skies is also not an easy job.
"An airline will need to get the proper slots to start another flight
domestically. It will also need time to be able to market and then sell the
flight. Even if the airline is to use the aircraft which was used to operate
flights to China then the chances are that another aircraft which was being
used to operate this flight will be grounded," a network planning
executive said.
However, what might help the Indian airline industry is that the domestic civil
aviation market is a large one. "People might change their travel plans
and instead of travelling to an area affected by the virus, may decide to
travel within the country," said another senior airline official.
The former Commercial Director of a domestic airline was of the view that the
domestic industry should use the fall in passenger demand, Indian carriers
withdrawing from some markets and Indian passengers not being allowed into some
countries as an opportunity to "get major servicing done on their aircraft
so that these carriers can be back with a bang when the market bounces back and
demand pick up again."
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