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Indian Govt should restart scheduled international flights: IATA

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The International Air Transport Association (IATA) wants India to restart scheduled international flights and end capacity and fare capping in the domestic market as these distort competition and hurt consumers.

The civil aviation ministry put in place a cap on capacity and fares following resumption of domestic air travel last May. Similarly scheduled international flights are still suspended by India and these have been replaced with air travel bubbles with over 25 countries.

IATA which represents over 290 global airlines including four in India feels that these restrictive measures are no longer warranted.

In an interaction with media persons on Tuesday, IATA Director General Willie Walsh said the Indian government should take data-driven decisions and remove regulations that restrict capacity and access to allow the aviation industry to recover quickly.

“Politicians are quick to impose measures but slow to remove them,” he remarked and added that it is time for India to reopen international travel. The Indian air travel bubbles were originally intended for the repatriation of people stranded overseas and that system is no longer relevant as the environment now is different from last year, he said.

Walsh also hopes the government will end capacity and fare capping in the domestic market which has slowed down the growth. Indian airlines are allowed to fly only 65 per cent capacity but the actual capacity deployed is only about 50-55 per cent at present.

” Is it fair that Indian people suffer to protect weak airlines,” he asked.

According to aviation consultancy CAPA, total traffic at Indian airports fell by 66.3 per cent in FY2021 to 115 million passengers, a level last seen in FY2008. This comprised 105 million domestic airport

passengers (equivalent to 52.5 million airline passengers, each of which are counted twice, once at the departure airport and once at the arrival airport), and just over 10 million international passengers. While domestic traffic declined by 61.8 per cent, the fall in international traffic was 84.8 per cent.

Walsh believes that domestic and international air travel in India will be back to the 2019 level only by 2024 due to reduction in fleet size and weak financial condition of carriers.