Turbulent Indian aviation sector caught in âperfect stormâ
Published: 25/05/2009 05:00
Indiaâs airlines are caught in a âperfect stormâ of big losses, high debt and falling demand, and need urgent help from the new government to make them high-flyers again, says an industry report. | |||||||
| The struggling sector was once a vibrant symbol of Indiaâs economic progress but it has seen its fortunes nosedive due to over-expansion, costly fuel and cut-throat competition. âThe industry now is at a very critical stage,â said Kapil Kaul, Indian head of the Sydney-based Center for Asia Pacific Aviation, the consultancy which authored the report titled âAviation Agenda for The Next Indian Government.â Sector losses for the fiscal year just ended in March 2009 are expected to nearly double from last year to US$1.75 billion, Kaul said. Thatâs a fifth of the losses of airlines globally of $8.5 billion estimated by the International Air Transport Association. âIndiaâs contribution to this [loss] is significantly higher than the 2 percent of world air traffic for which it accounts,â said the report. The Indian industryâs woes are highlighted by a slump in passengers. In April, the number of domestic passengers fell by 591,000 or 15.2 percent year-on-year, the fourth straight month of declines. The figures are a far cry from earlier heady government forecasts that passenger growth would run at 25 percent annually until the end of the decade. Passenger numbers were expanding by double digits when Indiaâs economy was booming. Cheap fares and increasing affluence among Indiaâs middle classes drove a migration from the countryâs antiquated train network to planes. After the government opened Indiaâs skies to more competition in 2004, a clutch of new airlines took flight, revolutionizing domestic travel in the country of 1.1 billion. But then costlier oil pushed up air fares last year, sending many passengers back to trains. Now the sector has also been hit by a slowing economy triggered by the global financial crisis, reducing business and leisure journeys. âIt needs to quickly restructure and the new government has to help them reduce high structural costs,â Kaul told AFP, citing hefty jet fuel taxes. There is also a need to allow more domestic airlines to fly internationally to boost revenues, Kaul said. The Congress-led government should allow foreign airlines to take equity stakes in domestic airlines to give them access to fresh capital, he said, but to draw investment the carriers must clean up their balance sheets. âOver-aggressive expansionâ to grab market share is âpartly responsible for the fiscal demise of the sector,â the report said. Flagship state airline Air India is hurting the most. Itâs estimated to have racked up $800 million in losses for the past year and debt of $4 billion, the report said. Air India, which flies internationally, merged with government-run domestic carrier Indian last year to become more efficient but its planes are flying emptier and passenger revenues are still falling. Despite this, it still plans to take delivery this year of 26 new aircraft â“ âa significant augmentation in capacity when the opposite would be more appropriate,â said the report. And Indiaâs two major private airline groups, Jet Airways and Kingfisher Airlines, also have hefty debts and big losses. Jet reported its third-quarter net loss more than doubled to $44 million. Rationalization âis inevitable and desirable for the health of the industry,â said Kaul, who believes India can only support two full-service carriers. He declined to say which should survive. But the no-frills airline model offered by carriers such as Indigo Airlines, which has bucked the falling passenger trend, could be the platform for future growth, he said. Source: AFP | |||||||
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