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Air India Express finds itself without enough pilots

Low cost carrier Air India Express finds itself with planes, but not enough pilots. The pilots seem to have flown away. The scarcity has gone so far as to stain parent Air India’s balance sheet, reports CNBC-TV18.

Air India Express pilots, or the lack of them, seem to be grounding profits. The airline more than doubled its fleet strength to seven aircrafts from three. But it could not increase the number of its destinations.

When it had three planes, last year, it flew to 36 Indian locations, now with twice as many aircrafts; it has added just two more destinations. That’s because it simply does not have the pilots to fly its aircrafts. Air India officials admit that a scarcity of pilots is showing on the financials.

Chairman, Air India, V Thulasidas said, “The loss cannot be quantified since we have an operational profit. But the profits could have certainly been more if we had operated.”

Separately, at parent company Air India, profits are plummeting. Sources say that profits could be about Rs 15 crore, down from Rs 97 crore that it posted last year. That’s partly because of Air India Express.

Chairman, Air India, V Thulasidas says, “It has to be marginal, the overall costs and the cost of oil has increased, we had to incur one-third more costs.”

Air India’s load factor has also dipped in the first half of the year. But it is confident that a new fleet will help it to regain market share.

Up, up and away

It’s about 2pm on a Tuesday. In a span of about thirty minutes, just seven cars and vans pull up in front of the departure gate at Sharjah International Airport. Some of the passengers are from Sharjah, others are driving in from Dubai. They are heading for different destinations Mumbai, Doha, Bahrain and Kuwait but all are taking Air Arabia, the budget carrier in the region that began flying in October 2003.

Inside the airport, however, the limited space looks fairly crowded. The two officials at the Air Arabia information counter are busy answering queries from a constant stream of passengers. The airline’s logo is displayed on several walls and columns inside, making its dominance felt.

In less than five years, Sharjah airport has come a long way from its previously forlorn look, and a budget carrier such as Air Arabia seems to be making a crucial difference to it. Today, the carrier flies more passengers than any other airline almost 60 per cent in and out of Sharjah airport.

It would not be an exaggeration to say that Air Arabia, a company floated by the Government of Sharjah but run as a commercial entity, has provided a much-needed fillip to the airport, so much so that there has been a continuous surge in passenger traffic over the past few years.

The first six months of 2006, according to the latest report by Sharjah Airport Authority, has seen an increase of 37.6 per cent. The $22 million airport expansion is going on at a rapid pace to handle increased passenger and cargo traffic.

With analysts predicting more such carriers to take to the skies, such secondary or alternative airports with improved infrastructure could provide the incentive of low airport costs.

As well as owning the airline, the Sharjah government also owns the airport. That was an advantage Air Arabia started with. Sharjah airport presents itself more like a secondary airport that provides the airline with the benefit of a quick turnaround. In more ways than one Air Arabia’s operations out of Sharjah International Airport closely resemble, on a much smaller scale the successful “no frills” budget airlines of Europe and the United States. Ryanair and EasyJet in Europe mostly operate at smaller secondary airports. But there’s a long way to go to carve out a success on those lines or Southwest and JetBlue in the United States.

Business is also being carried from bigger international airports. The two other low-cost carriers in the region, Air-India Express and Jazeera Airways, are flying to Dubai International Airport. In fact, Jazeera uses Terminal 1 and is still able to maximise efficiency and costs, while Air-India Express operates to and from the less-congested Terminal 2 of the airport to minimise costs and to maximise a quick turnaround of 45 minutes.

To sustain low fares, discount carriers need high loads. And for that they need to operate on routes between large population centres.

Business is really taking off, with Jazeera and Air Arabia continuously expanding their routes. Air-India Express has plans to fly to Amritsar and Mangalore, both in India. In fact, the carriers are satisfied with the volumes, with all three running to capacity on all their routes during what is considered the peak season between July and September and turning impressive numbers the rest of the year. While in terms of expansion of routes, Air Arabia and Jazeera Airways have been growing rapidly. In less than three years of operation, Air Arabia now flies to 28 destinations in 18 countries. Kuwait’s Jazeera Airways flies to 12 destinations in eight countries. For both, India and West Asia are strong markets, simply because of the demography.

Air-India Express, which started in April 2005, is part of the government-owned national carrier Air India. It operates flights between Dubai, Sharjah, Abu Dhabi and Al Ain in the UAE and three cities of Kerala, the southernmost state of India that has a large expatriate population. It also operates flights between Kerala and Salalah and Muscat, Oman. Air India now has very limited flights to Kerala. According to London-based aviation industry analyst, David Kaminski-Morrow, being a part of another entity always runs the risks of “contaminating your brand, cannibalising your network and ultimately confusing your passengers.”

Air-India Express’ operations on the routes of Abu Dhabi and Muscat to Mumbai and Delhi became early casualties. After flying on and off for about eight months, it stopped operating on those routes. “The numbers were not up to our expectations,” said Sanjeev Talwar, Dubai-based regional director of Air India. “We saw that the clientele for Mumbai and Delhi is more business oriented and so we reversed the trend back to our legacy carrier, Air India.”

Low-cost carriers need flexibility to develop a route network and operate with maximum efficiency with no room for overstaffing, under-utilisation of aircraft or unnecessary costs such as relying too heavily on distribution channels other than the internet. They should have the negotiating power to agree favourable rates for airport services and also have access to alternative or secondary airports.

All three have to deal with one or more of these challenges as an operational hazard of any discount airline. But it’s especially challenging to maximise efficiency by lowering the cost of sales in a region that has low internet penetration and where credit cards are not always available to the target population.

In the three years Arabia has been operating, direct online purchases have gone up from a minuscule 2 per cent of the total bookings to about 25 per cent. All hope that the growth will be faster in the coming years. “In the next two to three years, I expect (direct) online booking to go up by 30-40 per cent,” said Adel Ali, chief executive officer of Air Arabia. The share of direct online booking in Air-India Express and Jazeera Airways is currently 30 per cent.

Although they have to deal with these challenges, the emerging low-fare airlines have a strong advantage in some cases there is little competition in their home market. “Jazeera Airways, for example, was the only home-base competitor to Kuwait Airways when it started operations. That’s a huge advantage,” Kaminski-Morrow says.

The three are, however, not directly competing, except for Air Arabia and Air-India Express which have flights to Kochi, India. Air-India Express, however, has flights to Kozhikode and Thiruvananthapuram too. The sheer volume on the Kerala route provides enough business for both carriers and until now have not posed a threat to each other. While Jazeera operates from Kuwait, Air Arabia operates from Sharjah. “I think there’s plenty of room for both at the present time,” Kaminski-Morrow added.

On its home turf, Jazeera Airways is in direct competition with Kuwait Airways and the national carriers of countries it operates in. In a recent interview with Gulf News, its chairman Marwan Boodai, citing Kuwait’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation figures, claimed that in its first four months Jazeera gained up to 50 per cent market share on more than half of its routes, flying 100,000 travellers. This was achieved with just two aircraft. Consequently, though it’s uncertain by how much, it’s eating into the profits of its competitors.

Air Arabia has started flying to Delhi, and Jazeera to both Delhi and Mumbai, pitting the carriers against Air India and Emirates Airlines. It’s quite possible that the bigger airlines might lose some numbers to the smaller carriers.

The budget sector, says Kaminski-Morrow, is likely to enlarge the population of travellers and not necessarily damage the bigger carriers. “There will certainly be a degree of cross-over by price-sensitive travellers, but budget carriers have a habit of generating additional passengers rather than simply stealing them from other airlines.”

Air Arabia’s Ali dismisses suggestions of competing with the bigger airlines, such as Emirates Airlines, and denting their profits. “We came in as a regional airline and we intend to stay that way,” Ali says. “Emirates is a successful, global airline.”

The market segments the two cater to are different, he elaborated. “Within the region, we are attracting people who use surface transport to travel. Also, we have been getting passengers who were not able to travel earlier or who travelled once every two years. Now they are travelling every year or even two or three times a year.”

Talwar of Air India agrees. “We have increased the cycle of travel. Our frequency has improved and so our numbers have improved and there is enough scope for all.”

In case of the bigger airlines Emirates, Qatar, Eithad they are all fighting among themselves to become bigger carriers, he added. They are all concentrating on bigger segments in different markets. Moreover, he points out, the operations of the low-cost carriers will not affect the bigger ones because they are not looking at much traffic from Dubai to India.

“They are looking at through-traffic from Europe and USA all those coming here. Their basic carriage is perhaps not more than 20 to 30 per cent. Eighty per cent is all through-traffic. Most of the big airlines (of the region) are relying on that.”

But it’s passengers such as Dhiraj Balani, a young software professional based in Dubai, who took an Air Arabia flight home to Mumbai that would bring a smile to Ali’s face.

Balani did not mind driving all the way to Sharjah to catch a flight on Tuesday that was priced, one-way, at Dh450, which he said was close to 50 per cent less than a bigger carrier would have offered.

“It’s a two and a half-hour flight, and I don’t care whether food is served or not. Or for that matter the comfort. It’s much cheaper.”

With the region witnessing an economic boom over the last few years, all industry insiders and analysts believe that there is room for more players. There is enough liquidity in the market to launch more budget airlines.

Kuwait, for example, witnessed a 4 per cent increase in total air traffic growth in 2005 over 2004 and passenger traffic more than doubled to 8.8 per cent during the same period.

The population in Kuwait in the corresponding period grew 7.7 per cent, GDP 19.4 per cent and the stock market index shot up 106 per cent. Young people were joining the workforce in increasing numbers. There were more people with disposable income to spend and many chose to fly.

The vibrant economic conditions aided by a policy of liberalisation in Kuwait help to account for the successful launch and continued success of Jazeera Airways, which was launched in 2005.

It is difficult to estimate how many budget airlines the region can sustain. Kaminski-Morrow suspects there will be more start-ups jostling to take a share of the market. The Middle East and intra-Gulf region currently has one of the highest rates of traffic growth in the air transport industry, Kaminski-Morrow confirms. And Middle East-India routes, he believes, are going to be one of the most competitive battlegrounds over the next few years.

“The market has yet to become fully liberalised something which has helped the rapid growth of Ryanair and EasyJet in Europe but it is not saturated. And this means that there is probably still room for other prospective budget airlines to catch up and flourish.”

AI flight causes scare at Bahrain airport

An Air India A-310 plane recently created a major scare at the Bahrain airport when it landed on the wrong runway and not the one the ATC there had asked it to touch down on. The incident happened earlier this month.

The airline has since asked the erring pilot to remain “on ground” till an inquiry into this serious lapse gets over.

“There was no risk to passengers. Bahrain airport has two runways and our plane did not land on the one it was earmarked to touch down on.

The A-310 was till allowed to land on the other runway as there was no risk (meaning other plane landing or taking off there),” said an airline spokesperson. “The pilot will remain in Mumbai till the probe is over,” he said.

Sources pointed out that the industry is facing a severe shortage of pilots because of which the DGCA recently raised the retirement age of pilots for commercial airliners from 60 to 65 some months back.

“Many airlines are now hiring retired pilots and inducting them after re-training. Since they have been out of practice for a while, mistakes can certainly take place,” said an aviation industry insider.

In fact, on Thursday Union civil aviation minister Praful Patel told Parliament that apart from India, other national carriers were facing shortage of pilots.

Alliance Air had a shortage of 10 pilots each for its Boeing 737 and ATR Turboprop fleet. AI and Air India Express have a shortage of 85 and 22 pilots respectively.

The sky is now of, for, and by the people

Indian aviation has taken time to get off the ground. Unlike other sectors where reforms began soon after liberalisation started in 1991, major reforms hit the aviation sector very recently, in 2002, when low-cost carriers were allowed. This happened nearly a decade after 1994.
Though aviation still remains largely under state control, the opening up of the skies for private carriers to fly in both domestic and international sectors, and the entry of low-cost carries, have led to quick growth in traffic. Overall passenger traffic grew by over 20% in 2004-05 and 2005-06. But domestic traffic registered almost 25% growth in 2005-06.Low-cost carriers debuted with Air Deccan starting operations in 2003. With government approval, 2005 alone saw the entry of four new carriers in the domestic segment—SpiceJet, Kingfisher Airlines, GoAir and Paramount Airways. The last year also sawAir-India launching its low-cost Air-India Express.

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The first step the government took to liberalise the aviation sector was the repeal of the Air Corporations Act, 1953, which had nationalised the airline industry, paving the way for private airlines. But many of the private players, who had gained almost 40% of market share, could not sustain their operations. In 1997, the government set up a committee to review the “sickness of the private domestic airlines”. To eliminate non-serious entrepreneurs and achieve economies of scale, the minimum fleet size for a scheduled operator was raised from three to five aircraft and the minimum amount of shareholders’ funds was also enhanced.

An airport infrastructure policy was also announced the same year to allow private equity participation in developing airports besides allowing 40% foreign investment in domestic carriers. But no foreign carrier is allowed to hold a stake in domestic companies.With the sector registering phenomenal growth, the government set up the Naresh Chandra Committee and the Kaw Committee in 2003 and 2005,respectively, to help strengthen regulations in the sector.

The government, after a gap of over 10 years, is now spending $10 billion on buying 111 new aircraft for state-owned carriers Indian Airlines and Air-India.On the ground, modernisation of existing airports and the setting up of new ones have also been initiated. According to estimates, investments of Rs 40,000 crore will be needed to develop and modernise airports by 2010. The Delhi and Mumbai airports alone will require Rs 15,000 crore.

The modernisation of other two metro airports, Chennai and Kolkata, is being examined. The government has also firmed up plans for upgradation of the non-metro airports. This will be done jointly by the Airports Authority of India and private players

Dubai-Mangalore low-budget flight may be launched in a couple of months

Air India is likely to launch its low-cost airline Air India Express between Dubai and Mangalore in a couple of months as it has deposited money with Airports Authority of India (AAI) to set up facilities at the Bajpe Airport.

Airport sources told here on Friday that Air India was expected to start work on setting up facilities such as check-in counter and office and duty manager’s room at the airport in a few days. Although the AAI had earlier allotted space for the airliner to set up its facilities at the airport, the latter had not deposited the amount needed for the purpose. But the amount was deposited on Thursday, they said.

Air India had proposed to start its Air India Express flight service between Mangalore and Dubai in May. But it did not materialise so far. It was said that the airline is facing shortage of aircraft.

The Union Government has declared Mangalore airport as the customs airport. The Police department has provided training to the staff to be deployed for immigration clearance at the Bureau of Immigration, Mumbai.

Directorate of Customs has also trained its manpower needed for customs clearance. The AAI has provided all basic facilities needed for starting service to international destinations.

Aviation policy

Only Air-India could start services to the Gulf according to the civil aviation policy, sources said.

But Air India had not begun any promotional activities for the proposed service. Hence it was not sure when exactly it would start it, sources said.

Air India Express Acquires Office Space

As what can be regarded as a further step closer to seeing international flighs land at the Bajpe airport here, Air India has deposited the requisite amount for the sake of setting up its facilities to handle Air India Express flights.

Speaking to Daijiworld, airport sources said according to existing plan, the check-in counter and the duty manager’s office should be ready in a few days.

With the union government having accorded Mangalore status of a customs airport and with the police personnel having undergone training in immigration formalities etc. everything except the landing of regular flights appears to be in place.

An airline official told this correspondent that the regular cancellation and diversion of flights destined to Mangalore owing to heavy rains might have dampened the tempo of early introductions of international flights.

Expressing their serious apprehensions, some regularly travelling Gulf-bound passengers said that there was some lobby, possibly of Mangalore-Mumbai bus operators or even domestic airlines, working against early introduction of direct flights to the Gulf, as it would affect their cash registers.

A no-frills, low-cost flight to Mumbai

Chennaites’ wait to fly by budget airline Air India Express (AIE) is over. The `no frills’ airline is entering the domestic sector with a low fare offer.

A release from J.V.J. Subramaniam, District Sales Manager, Air India, says Air India Express is offering a one-way fare of Rs.999 (plus taxes) from Chennai to Mumbai on its Saturday flights. Booking can be done through the website www.airindiaexpress.in. A Mumbai-bound passenger who wishes to travel in the all-economy 185-seater AIE jet would have to pay Rs.1,649, including travel tax of Rs.650.

AIE, a subsidiary of Air India, claims that it offers the lowest fares in the market.

A trial run was made last Saturday through Chennai. The service will begin this Saturday. The new AIE Mumbai-Chennai-Mumbai service would leave Mumbai every Saturday at 8 p.m., reach Chennai at 9.45 p.m., leave Chennai at 10.45 p.m. and reach Mumbai at 00.35 a.m. on Sunday.

The service is expected to be a boon for those who have always wanted to fly to India’s business and fashion capital, at low cost.

Air India Express offer

Air India Express has come out with an offer for the air passengers. The scheme offers a one way fare of Rs 999 plus applicable taxes for the passengers to fly from Chennai to Mumbai on their Saturday flights which can be booked through their website www.airindiaexpress.in

PSU insurers bag AI insurance cover

A consortium of public sector insurance companies, led by New India Insurance, has bagged the insurance cover for Air India, reports Business Line.

It has been learnt that the airlines managed to negotiate a 15-16% discount in the lead rate. However, it is expected that the premium payout for getting an insurance cover for Air India and Air India Express would be around USD 15 million during the current year.

The airline has sought an insurance cover for over five million passengers and an aircraft fleet of more than 50 this year, up from 44 aircraft last year. It has also taken an insurance cover for the six new Boeing 737-800 aircraft that are scheduled to join Air India Express fleet during the year and for the five new Boeing 777 aircraft that are scheduled to join the Air India fleet as per the original delivery schedule drawn up with the aircraft manufacturer.

The current insurance cover has estimated that the average fleet value would increase to USD 4 billion from USD 2.8 billion during the previous year. The AI insurance cycle runs from July 1 to June 30

Karnataka NRIs’ Efforts to Bring about Kuwait-Mangalore Direct Flight

As the Mangalore airport has been announced as a Custom airport and given green signal to handle International flights, efforts are going on all around the Gulf countries to arrange direct flights to Mangalore.

The campaign started in Dubai a couple of years ago has now spread around the Gulf, and the Karnataka NRIs in Kuwait are making special efforts not only to bring International flight to Mangalore but also to have various Karnataka-related issues addressed.

A delegation from United Associations of Karnataka (UAKK) in Kuwait, a forum of 15 Associations working for the welfare of the people of Karnataka in Kuwait and in India, had a meeting in the evening of June 27, 2006 with Captain Mukhled K Al-Sawagh, Vice President, Operations, Jazeera Airways in Kuwait and Reinhard Kossack, Chief Operating Officer in their Head Office in Kuwait with regard to direct flights from Kuwait and other Gulf sectors to Mangalore airport.

John Tauro of Kuwait Aviation, a member of United Associations of Karnataka, Kuwait had arranged the said meeting with these Jazeera Airways higher officials, with the help of Bobby Varghese Jacob of the same Airways.

Pascal Pinto- Coordinator, government affairs of UAKK Kuwait, along with Hasan Yusuf and Fayaz Sheik (members of the delegation), submitted a memorandum to the Vice President, Operations requesting Jazeera Airways to help the NRIs from Mangalore and the surrounding areas by operating direct flights to Mangalore from Kuwait and other Gulf sectors.

Jazeera Airways officials told the delegation that they would look for possible ways to help in this matter and suggested to submit the details of the complete facilities available in Mangalore airport for International airways/flights. They also said that they would have another meeting with the UAKK delegation after studying the report on facilities available in Mangalore airport and the financial feasibility of operating direct flights to Mangalore.

The UAKK delegation thanked the Jazeera Airways officials for their encouragement to go ahead in this matter.

In the meantime, efforts are still on to exert maximum pressure on Air India Express and some other airlines to start immediate flights between Dubai and Mangalore.

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