Showing posts with label Indian Aviation- In General May 2020. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indian Aviation- In General May 2020. Show all posts

Sunday, May 31, 2020

Airline pilots voice concern of contracting covid infection from communication equipment used in flights

In the wake of an Air India repatriation flight to Moscow having to return from Uzbekistan airspace, back to the Delhi airport after the airline’s ground team discovered that the pilot had tested Covid-19 positive, pilots with several airlines have voiced their concerns regarding contraction of the virus from various means, primarily headsets which are re-used by pilots during their flights.

Pilots from various airlines have voiced their concerns relating to contraction of the disease from gadgets like headsets which remain stuck to their lips for communication while flying.

A senior pilot who is a Captain employed with a private airline, told The Statesman, on conditions of anonymity, “All pilots are now looking for individual headsets which are a vital gadget for pilots. The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has not mandated the airlines to give individual headsets which are instead reused by pilots. This leaves pilots most vulnerable and defeats the purpose of masks, PPEs etc. since the microphones remain stuck to our lips.”
Highlighting the importance of headsets, the senior pilot said “It plays a vital role since a large part of communication during flight depends on it. Without it there will be no clear recording or communication between a pilot and a copilot.”

He pointed out, “Expecting the headpsets to be only sanitised, is an option which leaves room for immense doubt since one doesn’t know if it is 100 per cent sanitised and whether at all it can be sanitised since it is a delicate electronic gadget. Also, sanitisation depends on time since after a pilot has used it, the next pilot might not have the time to sanitise it because of a rush hour. One also cannot verify whether the last pilot who used it, has sanitized it.”

Asked what could be the reason behind DGCA not mandating it for airlines, the Captain said “There is a cost factor involved. Buying individual headsets might incur lot of expenses. At, present many airlines have asked pilots to buy their own headsets which can cost anything from Rs 15000 to Rs.78000 depending on the type but still there is no clarity on the matter.”

He added, “There is also an issue in procuring one’s own headsets since it may not be certified for use.” Commenting on what could be the solution, the pilot pointed out, “The DGCA must mandate it to airlines to provide pilots with individual and certified headsets of a particular type for all, clearing all room for confusion.”
31/05/20 Soumyadip Mullick/Statesman

529 Domestic Flights Carrying 45,646 Passengers Operated On Saturday: Aviation Minister

New Delhi: A total of 529 flights carrying 45,646 passengers operated on Saturday, said Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri on Sunday.
Domestic services were suspended in India due to the coronavirus-induced lockdown and resumed after a gap of two months on Monday.

Indian carriers operated a total of 2,340 flights till Friday -- 428 on Monday, 445 on Tuesday, 460 on Wednesday, 494 on Thursday and 513 on Friday.

Mr Puri said on Twitter on Sunday: "Domestic operations on 30th May 2020 (Day 6) till 2359 hrs. Departures 529. 45,646 passengers handled. Arrivals 530. 45,622 passengers handled."

A departure is counted as a flight during the day.

During the pre-lockdown period, Indian airports handled around 3,000 daily domestic flights, aviation industry sources said.

In February, when the lockdown was not imposed, around 4.12 lakh passengers travelled daily through domestic flights in India, according to Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) data.
31/05/20 PTI/NDTV

No Restrictions on Airlines Regarding Number of Flights From June 1, Claims Report

New Delhi: When the Union civil aviation ministry gave a go-ahead to domestic flight operations from May 25 — after a gap of two months — the condition that was imposed on airlines was that they would have to stick to the one-third of the original summer schedule. As from June 1, the country is entering its first phase of unlock 1, the rule will not be applicable anymore, a TOI report said.
In general, the summer schedule includes 24,643 weekly domestic flights run by all airlines. For operations from May 25, only 8,214 weekly flight schedules were cleared.
Does this mean there will be more flights in the coming days?
Yes. There is no cap on the airlines to fly more routes. But most busy airports, including Mumbai, Chennai, Bengaluru, Kolkata, have a strict upper limit on daily arrivals and departures, which will restrict the airlines to run on more routes. But the airlines can run more flights on comparatively lesser busy routes which have considerable demand.
Lockdown 4.0 comes to an end on May 31. In the guidelines released by the MHA, there is no change as regards to domestic flights. International flights, however, have been barred from operations at least until June 30.
31/05/20 India.com

Chandigarh: Flights departing with just 26% capacity

Mohali: Poor occupancy is hurting flight operators in regaining momentum since the domestic operations were allowed from May 25 after a gap of almost two months.

Flights departed with just 26% occupancy and arrived with 42% at the Chandigarh international airport in five days, according to Airports Authority of India (AAI) data.

A total of 2,376 passengers had arrived and 1,433 departed. As many as 31 flights operated from Chandigarh from May 25 to May 29, bringing and taking 3,809 passengers only.
Each aircraft has a capacity of 180 passengers on an average. In an ideal scenario, 5,580 passengers should have arrived and an equal number departed. The arrival of 2,376 passengers in 31 flights pegs the occupancy rate at 42%. Similarly, the occupancy rate for departures was 26%, with 1,433 people leaving the city.
A leading flight operator at the airport said, “On an average, we get 75% occupancy in a flight from Delhi and Mumbai, but here we are yet to break even. A single flight to Mumbai fetched a sale of Rs 14 lakh for to-and-fro trip. On May 29 Mumbai flight arrived with full capacity but departed with just 35 passengers, which is just 19% occupancy. In a single day, we sustained losses of Rs 6 lakh per flight.”
31/05/20 Barinderjit Saluja/Times of India

Saturday, May 30, 2020

513 domestic flights carrying 39,969 passengers flew in India on Friday: Hardeep Puri

New Delhi: A total of 513 domestic flights carrying 39,969 passengers were operated in India on Friday, civil aviation minister Hardeep Singh Puri said on Saturday.
Domestic services resumed in India after a gap of two months due to the coronavirus lockdown. Indian carriers have operated a total of 1,827 flights till Thursday - 428 on Monday, 445 on Tuesday, 460 on Wednesday and 494 on Thursday.
Puri said on Twitter on Saturday: "Day 5. 29th May till 2359 hrs. Departures 513. 39,969 passengers handled. Arrivals 512. 39,972 passengers handled." A departure is counted as a flight during the day.

During the pre-lockdown period, Indian airports handled around 3,000 daily domestic flights, aviation industry sources said.

In February, when the lockdown was not imposed, around 4.12 lakh passengers travelled daily through domestic flights in India, according to Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) data.

Airports in West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Telangana and Tamil Nadu have been allowed to handle a restricted number of daily flights as these states do not want a huge influx of flyers amid the rising number of Covid-19 cases.
While domestic services resumed in Andhra Pradesh on Tuesday, they restarted in West Bengal on Thursday.
30/05/20 PTI/Times of India

Headwinds galore as action returns to skies

New Delhi: "Our airports continue to function smoothly," tweeted Union Civil Aviation Minister, Hardeep Singh Puri, on Friday evening, as he proceeded to give his daily update on domestic airline operations since their resumption on May 25 in India.

Puri said, on day 5, which was May 29, till 1700 hours, India had clocked 371 flights, and a total number of 30,814 flyers had taken to the skies on these flights. These numbers were lesser than the day 4 data, according to which 38,078 passengers had flown on 494 flights.

On Monday, amid a lot of confusion over state norms for quarantine and with many states announcing delayed resumption of operations, Indian airlines took off across the country, even as many countries are yet to open up air travel.

After almost 5 days of flying now, travel websites have been able to put together some basic trends on domestic air travel in India so far.

One of India's leading online travel companies, Make My Trip, says that while Mumbai-Varanasi, Delhi-Patna and Mumbai-Delhi were the top selling sectors when bookings opened on May 21, in the last few days, bookings in the Mumbai-Imphal, Bengaluru-Guwahati, Delhi-Srinagar and Delhi-Imphal sectors have picked up.

Travel website, Paytm Travel too says they continue to witness that more flyers from metro cities are booking tickets, largely one-way. "For Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore as the origin cities, we are witnessing large numbers of bookings for destinations such as Patna, Guwahati, Bhubaneswar, Bagdogra, Lucknow, Ranchi among others," Abhishek Rajan, Senior Vice-President at Paytm Travel told India Today Television.

The flight aggregators say that travel between metro to non-metro routes has taken a lead over the conventional metro to metro routes. Experts explain that this is mainly owing to people either leaving metro cities to return to their homes or even escaping these metros that have emerged as COVID-19 hotspots.
30/05/20 Poulomi Saha/India Today

Domestic Flights Are Not Spreading COVID-19: Hardeep Singh Puri

New Delhi: At a time when states are complaining of an increased number of COVID-19 cases after the domestic flight services have resumed, Union civil aviation minister Hardeep Singh Puri has said that flight operations itself can not be behind COVID-19 infections.
In an interview to the Economic Times, the minister has said that airflow in airplanes are designed in a way that the chances of the spread of the virus are the least. “I say that these COVID-positive passengers were detected because we have the right systems in place and they are functioning efficiently,” the minister said.
As many as 12 asymptomatic passengers who travelled in four flights of IndiGo have tested positive for Covid-19, the airline said on Thursday. SpiceJet had said on Wednesday that two of its passengers who travelled from Ahmedabad to Guwahati via Delhi on Monday tested positive for Covid-19.
On Tuesday, IndiGo had said that a passenger who travelled on flight 6E 381 from Chennai to Coimbatore on Monday evening tested positive for the disease.
Air India had stated on Wednesday that a passenger who was on an Alliance Air flight from the national capital to Ludhiana tested positive for coronavirus and a total of 41 people, including five crew members, had been quarantined.
Domestic passenger flights resumed in India from May 25. Since then, 16 passengers of three different airlines have tested positive for Covid-19.
Punjab Health minister Balbir Singh Sidhu on Friday said there is a need to reduce domestic flights from Mumbai and Ahmedabad where a large number of coronavirus cases have been found.
29/05/20 India.com

‘One-third cap on domestic flights goes from June 1’

New Delhi: The cap on domestic flights taking to the skies again from May 25 at one-third of the original summer schedule will go from June 1 as the Centre enters the unlock phase. Senior aviation officials say that it is now upto airlines depending on demand and supply to increase flights while factoring in the conditions or restrictions imposed by different states. Some airports like Mumbai, Chennai, Bengaluru and Kolkata have strict upper limit on daily schedule domestic flight movement set by their respective states.

The original summer schedule approved by the DGCA was for 24,643 weekly domestic flights by 10 airlines including copper operator Pawan Hans. The one-this schedule approved for restarting operations in the lat week of May was for 8,214 weekly (over 1,170 daily) flights. According to aviation minister H S Puri, May 29 saw 1,025 flights with about 40,000 flyers.
30/05/20 Saurabh Sinha/Times of India

Domestic air traffic yet to gain momentum

Thiruvananthapuram: Though domestic services resumed with a positive note in the country from Monday, the passenger traffic is yet to pick up in domestic routes due to the uncertainties in various states, including providing epass and the prospects of being quarantined. A 183-seat aircraft of Air India Express flew with 70 passengers on board on Thursday from Delhi to Madurai in Tamil Nadu, while the passenger load factor of other private airlines, including IndiGo, was also not satisfactory.
Sources in Air India Express told TNIE that operating an aircraft with below 50 per cent passenger load factor is a huge liability to airlines. Passengers are wary of the uncertainties in various states. For instance, there were reports that the passengers from other states have to undergo paid quarantine in Karnataka and that dissuaded many. Issues related to granting e-pass also hinder the movement of passengers, he said. Amjith Bhooshan, a private company staff in Bengaluru who booked a ticket from Kochi to Bengaluru on June 1, said he received a message from Indigo that the flight has been cancelled and the fund was credited to his account.
“I was hoping to rejoin duty by June 1.” Though the ticket was cancelled, the airline company staff called him and told him that another ticket would be provided in an alternative flight arranged by the airline, which he can redeem any time in one year. Sources close to IndiGo confirmed that though the airline has been operating from Kochi to various cities, including Bengaluru, Delhi, Hyderabad and Kannur, the passenger load factor is well below normal in many flights.
30/05/30 Dhinesh Kallungal/New Indian Express

Can recognise limits on airfares as a short term measure, says AirAsia CEO

AirAsia India can appreciate limits placed on airfares as it is a "very very short term" measure, its CEO and MD Sunil Bhaskaran on Friday said, adding that the airlines and the market should ideally be left alone when it comes to deciding ticket prices. On May 21, the central government issued coronavirus-related guidelines to restart domestic flights from May 25 and prescribed a lower limit and upper limit on airfares after setting up seven categories of routes as per the flight duration. It clarified the fare limits would be in place till August 24.

"Ideally, we would like it to be a free market, as far as prices are concerned. But given the circumstances and as a very very short term measure, we can appreciate it (limits on fares)," said the Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director of the low-cost carrier at a webinar of aviation consultancy firm CAPA India.

"We can understand this. But I don't think this could ever be or this should be a permanent measure. The market has to be left (alone) and the airlines have to be left (alone) to decide," he added. Domestic passenger services restarted after a gap of two months on Monday when 428 flights carried around 30,000 passengers to their destinations.

When asked about the passenger traffic since Monday, Bhaskaran said, "We do feel that the pent up demand may last for two or three weeks and it is up to us and the airports to bring the confidence in people to travel...Quite frankly, we have taken a more pessimistic view of how things would be or may be conservative. We would be very happy to see an upside to what we have planned."


When asked which routes the aircraft are likely to see high traffic in the next few months, he replied, "When we see it, one big factor is the quarantine rules in the state and how clear it is to understand and whether there is an institutional quarantine." He said when a plane goes outside of Bengaluru, it has been seeing good loads (number of passengers) since Monday, but when it comes back to Bengaluru, it has abysmal loads because people don't want to come and go into institutional quarantine.
30/05/20 PTI/Business Today

Indian aviation on a two-year pause, says AirAsia India CEO Bhaskaran

India's aviation industry is likely to be on a two-year pause as a result of the unprecedented disruption due to the COVID-19 pandemic, AirAsia India Chief Executive Officer Sunil Bhaskaran said.

Speaking in CAPA India webinar on designing a sustainable roadmap for the revival of Indian aviation, Bhaskaran said that while there is no doubt about a strong demand outlook for the Indian market in the long run, the next few quarters are going to be challenging with less number of flights and weak load factors.

"All expansions are on hold. We are struggling to keep up to whatever capacity we have. Unfortunately, aviation industry is a contract between a lessor and a lessee, so strongly in favour of lessor that even if we would like to, we could not return the aircraft or the cost of it would be so high that it would not be worthwhile. As I see today, it has to come with the confidence of customers which will come either with a cure or a vaccine in place. I don't see that coming back in 18-24 months. So I think it is a pause for Indian aviation for two years. But we will surely get back to the same growth path after that," Bhaskaran said.

The budget carrier is currently operating with 20 percent of its total capacity and witnessing an average of 50 percent load factor since it resumed operations from May 25. So far, the quarantine rules of states are playing the biggest role in driving demand such as those making mandatory institutional quarantine are seeing less demand. There is also demand from a large number of migrant workers who want to return to their destinations, primarily to the eastern part of the country.

Bhaskaran said that the airline is glad that it is finally flying after being grounded for two months but admitted that there was a lot of chaos and confusion on May 25 due to the last minute clarity on quarantine rules by several states. In fact, mandatory institutional quarantine for arriving passengers in a state like Karnataka is leading to abysmal load factor on incoming flights to Bengaluru while load factors coming out of the city are "good".
30/05/20 Anu Sharma/CNBC TV18

Friday, May 29, 2020

Airlines manage to fill half of flights on average; demand to fall further

Mumbai: With homebound students, young professionals, small-time businessmen and workers accounting for most travellers, airlines have managed to operate flights at about 50% occupancy rates, although industry insiders say demand will plunge once the spate of essential travel is over.
Civil aviation minister Hardeep Singh Puri wrote on microblogging platform Twitter that airlines ferried 30,136 passengers on 367 flights till 5 pm on Thursday.
This means airlines are operating with only 82 passengers on average per flight. Most aircraft in India have 180 seats.
The number Puri cited for previous days also threw up similar occupancy numbers.
Load factors for low fare carrier IndiGo, which carries nearly half of India’s domestic passengers, was below 50%, said an IndiGo executive.
“Majority of the travel is from metros to non-metros, primarily cities in the east and northeast like Patna and Guwahati. Those routes are seeing 60% loads or slightly higher. Flights to metros are barely filling more than 40%,” said a senior airline executive on condition of anonymity.
29/05/20 Anirban Chowdhury/Economic Times

All metros connected via flights, passenger numbers rise

New Delhi: The re-commencement of flight services to West Bengal on Thursday gave a boost to the overall domestic operations and passenger numbers in India.

Passenger flight services now connect all the major metro cities amongst other destinations in India.

Bengal had barred flight services till May 28.

Besides, connecting all the major metros, the addition of West Bengal also gave a boost to the overall flight and passenger numbers in India.

Till 5 p.m. on Thursday, airports across the country handled a total of 677 aircraft movements with 55,666 passenger footfalls.

On Twitter, Union Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said that 367 departures and 310 arrivals took place till 5 p.m. on Thursday.

The Centre has allowed limited passenger flights -- about one-third of the summer schedule -- to operate between metros and other destinations from May 25.

Passenger air services were suspended on March 25 due to the nationwide lockdown to check the spread of Covid-19.

On Wednesday, till 5 p.m., 354 departures and 288 arrivals were reported, ferrying almost 48,000 people.

As per Thursday''s schedule, 147 scheduled departures and 145 arrivals were planned from Terminal 3 in the national capital.

Similarly, Mumbai''s CSMIA saw a total of 50 scheduled flights, which included 25 departures and the same number of arrivals.

"Passenger numbers continue to rise as a number of issues like confusion over quarantine norms and ticket refunds are being sorted out," Nishant Pitti, CEO and co-founder of EaseMyTrip.com, told IANS.

"Teething issues are sorting out, things are getting better with time, further change in refund policy of IndiGo and AirAsia India have built trust among customers again, so now 10-15 per cent customers are boking tickets of future travel as well."

In another development, some passengers on IndiGo flights have tested Covid-19 positive.

These passengers include three individuals, who traveled on ''6E 955'' from Delhi to Jammu on May 26, while six were ferried onboard ''6E 6992'' from Bengaluru to Coimbatore on May 27 and another two used the ''6E 908'' service from Delhi to Coimbatore on May 27 too.
28/05/20 IANS/Outlook

Shefali Jariwala on her flying experience amid pandemic

New Delhi: Actress Shefali Jariwala along with her husband Parag Tyagi flew to Delhi from Mumbai on May 26 after the demise of her father-in-law. "My father-in-law was unwell for sometime. He was in the hospital for dialysis as his kidneys were giving him a lot of trouble, and just before the dialysis began he had a massive heart attack. He was admitted to hospital last month," Shefali told IANS.

Domestic air travel resumed in India on Monday post two months of coronavirus lockdown, and Shefali considers herself fortunate that she could board the flight and be with her family in time.
"Fortunately, flight operations had just begun, so we managed to reach there on time. We took a flight to Delhi and luckily our flight did not get cancelled as a lot of cancellations were happening that day," she added.
Shefali also spoke about the safety precautions she followed while travelling from one state to the other via air.
"We were properly covered. We had a mask, face shield. We wore hoodies, socks and shoes while travelling. We did our web check-in before reaching to the airport as it was mandatory. Staff checked our temperature before allowing us to enter the airport. We even had to bring our own baggage tags. It was more like a self check-in. I have never seen Bombay airport like this in my life. It was deserted. People were wearing masks, PPE suits and maintaining social distancing. There were hand sanitisers at every corner of the airport. There was sadness in the air. It felt different. I guess it's the new normal," she said.
28/05/20 IANS/India TV

Liquor baron hires 180-seater chartered plane for four family members to ‘avoid crowd’ at airport, flight

A Bhopal-based high net worth individual hired a 180-seater A320 plane of a private carrier to ferry four family members to New Delhi, in a bid to avoid crowd at the airport and in flight amid the COVID-19 outbreak, officials said on Thursday.

The person, who is a liquor baron, chartered the aircraft to send to Delhi his daughter, her two children and their maid, who were stuck in Bhopal since the last two months due to the coronavirus-induced lockdown, sources said.

The plane arrived here from Delhi on Monday with crew only and flew back with just four passengers for whom it was specially hired, they said.

“The A320 180-seater plane arrived here on May 25 to carry four members of a family, probably due to the coronavirus scare. It was chartered by someone and there was no medical emergency, an airline official said, refusing to divulge any further details. Bhopals Rajabhoj Airport Director Anil Vikram could not be contacted for comments.
28/05/20 PTI/Financial Express

The industry that has been massively hit by the pandemic will witness changes

Humans need to travel—it is a primal urge. At the same time, we are also a very resilient species. The impact of COVID-19 is unlike some of the crises that we have seen in the past like SARS and 9/11, in the sense that this pandemic is going to change the way we live, and not just the way we travel.
Read Sanjeeb Patel's full article >>

Big TN surge in infection of air passengers

New Delhi/Bengaluru/Coimbatore: At least 22 air passengers have tested positive for Covid-19 since Monday when domestic flight operations resumed, 17 of them in Tamil Nadu alone on Thursday. There were nine cases at the Coimbatore airport, Salem had five and Madurai three.

With the case count going up, states like Goa and Karnataka have already taken countermeasures. While Goa decided to compulsorily test all arrivals unless they were able to produce a negative test certificate, Karnataka requested the Centre to reduce the number of flights from high viral load states like Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu and Madhya Pradesh.

Of the nine cases of infection at the Coimbatore International Airport, five hailed from Tiruchy, two from Namakkal and one each from Coimbatore and Erode. Since they had flown in from Mumbai, Delhi and Chennai on Wednesday, officials said the cases would be added to the originating city’s tally. All nine have been sent to their native districts for treatment.

The five found infected in Salem had arrived by the same TruJet flight from Chennai on Wednesday. Their positive swab test report came on Thursday.

Of the three cases reported at the Madurai airport, two had arrived from Delhi on separate flights and one from Bengaluru on Wednesday. They are now in institutional quarantine.
29/05/20 New Indian Express

494 domestic flights carrying 38,078 passengers operated in India on Thursday: Aviation minister

New Delhi: A total of 494 domestic flights, carrying 38,078 passengers, were operated on Thursday, Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri on Friday.

Domestic flight operations resumed in the country on Monday after a gap of two months. All scheduled passenger flights were suspended from March 25 to May 24 due to the coronavirus-induced lockdown.

International passenger flights continue to remain suspended.

A total of 428 domestic flights, carrying 30,550 passengers, and 445 domestic services, carrying 62,641 flyers, were operated on Monday and Tuesday respectively.

On Wednesday, 460 domestic flights, carrying 34,336 passengers, were operated.

In February this year, when the lockdown was not imposed, around 4.12 lakh passengers travelled daily through domestic flights in India, according to Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) data.

During the pre-lockdown period, Indian airports handled around 3,000 daily domestic flights, aviation industry sources said.

Airports in West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Telangana and Tamil Nadu have been allowed to handle a restricted number of daily flights as these states do not want a huge influx of flyers amid the rising number of COVID-19 cases.

While domestic services resumed in Andhra Pradesh on Tuesday, they restarted in West Bengal on Thursday.

Though domestic flight operations across the country began on May 25, they could not be restarted in Kolkata and Bagdogra as the state''s machinery was involved in relief and restoration work after cyclone Amphan''s devastation.

On Friday, Puri tweeted: "Figures for domestic flights for 28th May 2020 till 2359 hours: Day 4, Departures 494, 38,078 passengers handled, Arrivals 493, 38,389 passengers handled."
29/05/20 PTI/Outlook

With rooms, flights going empty, here’s how airlines and hotels are making money

Two of the worst hit sectors due to coronavirus — aviation and hotel industries — are eyeing alternate revenue streams as lockdown dries up revenues. India’s domestic carrier SpiceJet has taken to flying cargo and airlines have also issued credit shells to those whose flights were cancelled. On the other hand, hotels are now offering discounts on bookings made for the future and have also started to deliver food to tide over the issue of short-term working capital deficit. Aviation and hotel industries typically have a high fixed-cost and have made almost zero revenue in almost a quarter as coronavirus lockdown put restrictions on movement.

While the government put restrictions on flights, some airlines have now taken to flying cargo and SpiceJet recently called it an “opportunity in crisis” as it expanded its cargo operations by converting passenger planes. Hotels have taken to giving discounts via gift vouchers to get some respite from the cash crunch as the sector continues to employ staff. However, small and mid sized hotels are more likely to give higher discounting as compared to those which are luxury hotels. Further to these, “drastic cost control…preliminary reopening plans and a sharp reduction in future supply addition” are also on the anvil, The Indian Express reported. “Globally, airlines and hotels have acknowledged the depth of this decline with recovery stated two to three years from now,” Pavethra Ponniah, vice president and sector head, ICRA, said, the newspaper reported.
29/05/20 Financial Express

Could India Become A Booming Stopover Country For Connecting Flights?

As India’s aviation market continues growing, could we see the country become a major stopover destination? India is home to two full-service carriers, Air India and Vistara, and well-located between Europe and East Asia. So, will India be able to capitalize on the new wave of travel? Let’s find out.
One of the main criteria to become an effective stopover country is geographic location. Countries that have succeeded in becoming major stopover destinations are those located between key continents. Looking at other regions that have become booming stopover countries, we see two areas in the lead: the Middle East and Southeast Asia.
For India, its geographical location puts it squarely between Europe and East Asia. Most European destinations are between seven and nine hours away from cities such as Delhi and Mumbai. Major Asian hubs such as Singapore and Ho Chi Minh are five hours in the other direction. India would also attract traffic from the Middle East, however, this is a much smaller market.

The Middle East capitalized on its location between the East and the West, connecting passengers globally. The Southeast Asian cities found a market in connecting passengers to Australia and other booming Asian countries. Just like these regions, India offers a unique location too.

Another essential factor to be a major stopover hub is the presence of a robust and reliable airline. Carriers such as Emirates, Qatar, Cathay Pacific, and Singapore Airlines have been pivotal in attracting tourists to their respective countries. India has struggled to do the same with Air India, which has been beset with operational and service issues. However, all of this is set to change.

The entry of Vistara into long-haul operations with its 787 Dreamliner will allow it to fill in Jet Airways’ role and expand direct routes from India. Furthermore, Air India’s privatization could see a huge facelift for the airline, allowing it to rebrand itself and offer superior service.

However, it is not only full-service carriers that are incumbent in India. The country is home to large low-cost carriers such as IndiGo and Spicejet, which offer passengers a cheaper alternative to explore the rest of the continent. IndiGo, in particular, has expanded to several international destinations and codeshares with Qatar and Turkish Airlines, allowing easy connections for passengers.
28/05/20 Syd Sharma/Simple Flying

Flyers cancelling tickets over quarantine worries

Air travel resumed after two months on May 25, but bookings are dicey, given the confusion over quarantining. Last-minute cancellation of flights is another major worry. The good news is that the fares haven’t spiked. But passengers are cancelling their tickets when they realise they may have to stay in quarantine for up to two weeks. A 14-day stay in a five-star quarantine hotel in Bengaluru adds up to Rs 49,700 (at Rs 3,550 a day), and passengers have to factor in the extra cost and time in when they plan their trips. At a budget hotel, two weeks comes to Rs 16,800.
Adding to their woes are last-moment flight cancellations. On the first day of flights resuming after two months, Delhi reported 80 flights were cancelled, with passengers coming to know of the cancellations only after reaching the airport. Air India has reportedly cancelled 92 flights between May 28 and June 1.
Many people are not willing to stay in quarantine and spend money on it, so they have cancelled their trips and decided to wait for the rules to change. Passengers must be informed about the quarantine rates for various categories before they start their journey, but it turns out the information isn’t shared in time for them to make informed decisions.
They have the liberty to choose their category of stay but can’t choose a particular hotel citing proximity to their living location, company policy or personal preference.  The passengers are given colour-coded coupons around the time of arrival to show where they stay: white for budget hotels, orange for three-star hotels and green for five-star hotels.
28/05/20 Anila Kurian/Deccan Herald

Flight operations to return to pre-COVID-19 levels by Diwali: Hardeep Singh Puri

By Diwali, flight operations in India will return to the levels seen before the COVID-19 outbreak, Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said.

"By Diwali (in November), we will have all our 650 aircraft operated by Indian carriers (flying)," Puri told The Economic Times.

"This may sound optimistic but what else are we going to do?" Puri added.

Domestic flight operations resumed in a staggered manner after a gap of two months on May 25. International flights to and from India remain suspended.
The industry is operating at 20 percent of the capacity seen before the COVID-19 outbreak, The Economic times reported.
In Puri's view, resuming economic activity is crucial since extending the lockdown could be "more devastating” than COVID-19.
"We will come out of the phase on top because we have a captive market unlike many other countries, which are aviation hubs," Puri told the publication.
29/05/20 moneycontrol.com

367 domestic flights operated till 5 pm on Thursday, airports in West Bengal resume services

New Delhi: A total of 367 domestic flights, carrying 30,136 passengers, operated throughout the country till 5 pm on Thursday, Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said.

Airports in West Bengal also started operations on Thursday, three days after domestic air travel resumed in India after a gap of two months.

All scheduled domestic passenger services were suspended in India from March 25 to May 24 due to restrictions in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

Earlier in the day, Puri had said that 460 domestic flights carrying 34,336 passengers were operated on Wednesday.

In the case of West Bengal, the minister on Sunday had said that the state will handle domestic flights from Thursday.

"Figures for domestic flights for 28th May 2020 are in. Departures 367, 30,136 passengers handled. Arrivals 310, 25,530 passengers handled. Total movements 677 with 55,666 passenger footfalls at airports.

â€Å“Total number of flyers 30,136. These are numbers till 1700 hrs for Day 4," Puri said in a tweet.

A total of 428 domestic flights carrying 30,550 passengers and 445 domestic services carrying 62,641 flyers were operated in the country on Monday and Tuesday, respectively.

In February this year, when the lockdown was not imposed, around 4.12 lakh passengers travelled daily through domestic flights in India, according to Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) data.

During the pre-lockdown period, Indian airports handled around 3,000 daily domestic flights, aviation industry sources said. A total of 16 asymptomatic passengers on seven different flights including 13 of them who travelled by IndiGo have tested positive for COVID-19 since the resumption of domestic air services on Monday, according to airlines data.

Two of the three asymptomatic passengers who tested positive for the infection had travelled by Spicejet while one took a flight of Air India subsidiary Alliance Air.

The Karnataka government, meanwhile, said on Thursday it has requested the civil aviation ministry to reduce the number of flights originating from five states--Maharashtra, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan--in the light of the high number of COVID-19 cases there, hours after a minister said it has "suspended" air travel from these states.

Seeking to clarify his statement, Law and Parliamentary Affairs Minister J C Madhuswamy maintained that Karnataka has not sought imposing a ban on flights from the five states as reported in some sections of the media. "India is flying high. Domestic operation figures for May 27, 2020 (till 23.59 hrs): Departures 460 with 34,336 passengers handled. Arrivals 464 with 33,525 passengers handled," Puri had said earlier in the day on Twitter.

If a flight takes off before midnight and lands in another airport after midnight, its departure and arrival are counted on different days, leading to a seeming mismatch in the figures of a particular day.
28/05/20 PTI/Outlook

Airlines manage to fill half of flights on average; demand to fall further

Mumbai: With homebound students, young professionals, small-time businessmen and workers accounting for most travellers, airlines have managed to operate flights at about 50% occupancy rates, although industry insiders say demand will plunge once the spate of essential travel is over.
Civil aviation minister Hardeep Singh Puri wrote on microblogging platform Twitter that airlines ferried 30,136 passengers on 367 flights till 5 pm on Thursday.
This means airlines are operating with only 82 passengers on average per flight. Most aircraft in India have 180 seats.
The number Puri cited for previous days also threw up similar occupancy numbers.
Load factors for low fare carrier IndiGo, which carries nearly half of India’s domestic passengers, was below 50%, said an IndiGo executive.
“Majority of the travel is from metros to non-metros, primarily cities in the east and northeast like Patna and Guwahati. Those routes are seeing 60% loads or slightly higher. Flights to metros are barely filling more than 40%,” said a senior airline executive on condition of anonymity.
29/05/20 Anirban Chowdhury/Economic Times

Thursday, May 28, 2020

As flyers test positive upon arrival, states look to tighten SOPs

Even as most states have strict quarantine and testing norms for passengers arriving by domestic flights, some like Delhi, Goa, etc had comparatively easier standard operating procedures (SOPs). But now with some passengers testing positive for coronavirus upon arrival, a further clampdown of stance by the states on free movement of air passengers could be on the cards. Goa has already moved to compulsorily test all arriving passengers, unless they were able to produce a negative test-certificate.

As of early Thursday, as many as four passengers, at least two of which were asymptomatic, had tested positive upon arrival. All four of these travelled on the first day of resumption of flight operations. Tuesday, India’s largest airline IndiGo reported a 24-year old person on its Monday flight from Chennai to Coimbatore tested positive. Another passenger, a 50-year old, on board an Alliance Air flight from Delhi to Ludhiana was also found positive on Tuesday. On Wednesday, two passengers who flew to Guwahati from Ahmedabad on SpiceJet flights also reported positive for the virus upon arrival.
In SpiceJet’s case, red-flags are also being raised at the fact that since one of the passengers was flying from Ahmedabad to Guwahati via Delhi, the passenger should have been tested at Delhi itself but wasn’t since there is no mandatory testing for those arriving at the Delhi airport.
Since it opened its airport to domestic passengers, the Goa government has changed its standard operating procedures twice. Earlier it had given three options — either get a Covid negative test certificate issued within 48 hours prior to the date of arrival by a lab authorised by ICMR or get test done at the airport for Rs 2000 and wait for results, or choose home quarantine. With the number of cases showing an increase, the Government has now removed the option of home quarantine with everyone having to undergo compulsory testing if they didn’t have a Covid-19 negative test certificate. Goa so far has 68 active cases of which 31 are active.
Even as the Centre announced the restarting of domestic flight operations with a two-day notice, it failed to extensively consult with the states. Hours before the recommencement of domestic flights, airlines were informed of the demands of certain states to operate curtailed schedules that led to cancellation of flights on the first day itself.
28/05/20 Pranav Mukul/Indian Express

Family of 4 charters Airbus A320 from Bhopal to Delhi

New Delhi: Bhopal airport is named after a famous king, Raja Bhoj. On Monday, when domestic schedule and charter flights were allowed, it saw a high net worth family charter an Indian carrier’s Airbus A320 to fly just four people — wife, two children and a nanny — to Delhi.
A west India-based company had chartered this 180-seater aircraft. Industry insiders say it may have cost about Rs 10 lakh. The aircraft took off from Delhi at 9.05am as a ferry flight — meaning crew only — on Monday and reached Bhopal at 10.30am. It took off with the four on board at 11.30am and reached Delhi at 12.55pm.
“There are several high net worth individuals (HNI) and companies who are very concerned about flying in a crowd with scores of other passengers during a pandemic. Airlines and charter companies are getting lots of inquiries for chartering planes these days. Since the price of aviation turbine fuel (ATF), the single biggest operating cost for a flight in India, is very low at the moment, airlines and charter companies are able to offer decent rates which the germaphobe HNIs/corporates don’t mind paying for their selves or their loved ones,” an airline official said.
The cost of chartering an A320 is anywhere between Rs4 and Rs 5 lakh an hour (depending on ATF price). So a Delhi-Mumbai-Delhi charter would cost about Rs 16-18 lakh.
While this Bhopal-Delhi flight may have been chartered to ensure that the four fly safe, charter industry insiders say a family of three had hired a wide-body aircraft to fly from Europe to India on May 21 — the day before commercial international flights were stopped in India. That trip is learnt to have cost about Rs 80 lakh, according to industry insiders.
“The cost of chartering a plane depends on whether there is a separate entity hiring for the different legs. So if a company or individual A hires a plane from Delhi to Mumbai and a company or individual B hires the return leg, each will have to bear one leg of the journey. But if someone is hiring in a way that the charter firm/airline has to fly the plane empty one way for picking or after dropping passengers, then the cost of both legs will need to be borne by one person,” said an industry insider.
28/05/20 Saurabh Sinha/Times of India

Farmer puts workers on flight after long wait to catch train

New Delhi: They had only dreamt of travelling in a plane and couldn’t have imagined that it would happen in the midst of a nightmare.

They were stuck in a mushroom farm at Tigipur village in north Delhi since March when they couldn’t make the annual trip to their homes in Samastipur district of Bihar because of the sudden lockdown. On Wednesday night, these 10 migrant workers were preparing to catch a 6am Indigo flight to Patna on Thursday, thanks to the farm owner, Pappan Singh Gahlot.
After watching thousands of migrant workers across the country – who had lost their jobs due to the coronavirus-induced lockdown - struggling to return to their villages in the absence of public transport and even getting killed in the process, Gahlot decided he would not let his men suffer like that.

The workers first registered themselves on the government portal for a seat on a special Shramik Express but didn’t get a response. Even as migrant workers across the city were queuing up under the scorching sun to register for the special trains, the government decided to resume domestic flights. And Gahlot too made a decision with the support of his wife, daughter and brother – his workers would be flying to Patna.

“My workers are like my family. They are all very old employees and have been working at my farm for several years with their families away in the villages. The migrants in Delhi and other parts of the country have been returning to their villages in inhuman conditions. I did not want my workers to face the same challenges,” said Gahlot. “I read so many reports of accidents on the highway. It disturbed me. My workers deserve respect. I could not have allowed to let them go like this.”

He said 48 labourers work on his 2.5-acre farm between August and March when mushrooms are grown. Every year, they leave in March for their villages and come back in August. This year, too, except for these unlucky 10, everyone else had gone back when the lockdown was announced. They stayed on the farm, waiting, with Gahlot providing them food and all amenities.

Now, they will be the first ones from their village to fly. “We didn’t have any problem in the past two months. When the trains started, we registered our names but never got any response. This is when our employer told us he would send us back by air,” said Naveen Ram, whose son, Aditya, was just three months old when he came to Delhi last year. His father, Lakhinder, has been working for Gahlot for 27 years and he for a decade now. “Our families are overjoyed,” he said.
28/05/20 Atul Mathur/Times of India

How artificial intelligence can help aviation industry with contactless flying amid the crisis

Post the 60-day lockdown, as the Civil Aviation Minister, Hardeep Singh Puri issued guidelines to commence domestic flight operation with 1/3rd capacity from May 25, 2020, Bangalore International Airport (BAIL) has also decided to resume their domestic travel operations with a contactless journey from pre-entry of the airport to security check to the boarding of the flight.

The BAIL press release has stated that “The technology will continue to enable a seamless airport journey, with greater emphasis on health and safety.” Starting from their pre-entry process, which includes e-boarding pass and thermal screening of people to facial recognition system at the check-in process and self-service kiosk, BAIL has been relying on new-age technologies to transform the whole process of travelling.

Alongside, Hyderabad’s Rajiv Gandhi International Airport has also planned to resume its operations with contactless flying for their passengers. GHIAL has deployed thermal cameras for monitoring travellers along with Automatic Information Management System, a virtual help desk for guiding travellers with their problems, which in turn, omits any contact with travellers.
The COVID-19 created a halt for the aviation industry, with an 80% drop in the global flight activity at the end of April. Therefore, the aviation companies are strategizing differently to revamp their entire business process with digital technologies like AI, ML and RPA. In fact, from passenger identification and baggage screening to customer support and predictive maintenance, airports and airline companies can heavily rely on artificial intelligence to augment the industry work process.
28/05/20 Sejuti Das/Analytics India Magazine

Air travel in India and the US: What has changed?

New Delhi: Air travel is one aspect that has changed due to the coronavirus pandemic. As thousands gather in airports and hundreds cluster on board flights, guidelines have been altered in an attempt to contain the spread of the disease while allowing people to migrate.

Air travel was possibly the biggest mode of transmission for Covid-19, which originated in China’s Wuhan and spread across the globe within three months. Take New York or Mumbai, for instance. These cities were hit hard as they host some of the busiest international airports.
However, while some countries shut down air services, others continued to operate despite the risks. India stopped air travel on March 25 and partially reopened the domestic aviation sector two months later on May 25. The US, which never fully halted operations, left it to airlines to impose norms or follow local restrictions, while only issuing some advisories.

While India is yet to allow international flights to operate, the US has, so far, banned travellers from few countries, including Iran, China, the European Schengen Area, the UK, Ireland and Brazil.

Further, the Indian government left it to states to decide quarantine guidelines for travellers landing at their airports. In the US, on the other hand, there are no norms except for international passengers, who are expected to voluntarily stay at home for 14 days and monitor their own health.
28/05/20 Indian Express

Wednesday, May 27, 2020

SC refuses pilot's plea against allowing Air India to operate flights with middle seats occupied

New Delhi: The Supreme Court Wednesday refused to entertain a pilot's plea seeking modification of its order which allowed Air India to fill the middle seats while operating its non-scheduled flights to bring back Indians stranded abroad up to June 6.
An intervention application was filed by Deven Kanani seeking modification of May 25 order on the ground that there has been spike in number of Covid-19 cases and even if a single flight (international /domestic) operates with full occupancy then many other passengers and crew are likely to get infected.
The top court said it does not want to add to the confusion after having passed order earlier this week.
A bench of Chief Justice S A Bobde and Justices A S Bopanna and Hrishkesh Roy, while refusing to modify its order said that whatever they (Centre and Air India) have done, howsoever bad it might be, let that interim arrangement continue for ten days.
Advocate Abhilash Panickar, appearing for the pilot, said that DGCA guidelines on social distancing should be followed and middle seats in the aircraft should be kept vacant.
The bench asked Panickar to approach the Bombay High Court if he wanted to raise any other issue related to the matter.
Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, appearing for the Centre and Air India, said that an expert committee has been appointed to look into the matter.
He said that health of citizens is paramount and government would take every possible steps to protect them.
The bench said that it trusts the expert committee and hope that it would take into all relevant considerations.
It told the petitioner that the court has asked the Centre and Air India to bring back the stranded Indians and they are doing it.
Now, let the High Court decide the issue finally, the top court said and gave the liberty to the pilot to withdraw the application.
The counsel for the petitioner then agreed to withdraw the application.
27/05/20 PTI/Economic Times

Over 42,000 ferried; 2 test Covid-19 positive

New Delhi: Domestic airlines ferried nearly 42,000 passengers on 325 flights till 5 pm on Tuesday on the second day of resumption of services.
Two travellers were tested positive for coronavirus, perhaps the first time since the flights resumed, while an AirAsia flight carrying 74 people made an emergency landing in Hyderabad.

The air carriers also resorted to cancellation of several flights on the second day of resumption of services due to truncated schedules following requests from several states owing to the coronavirus crisis posing difficulties to hundreds of passengers at several airports.
The number of cancellations was not immediately available though Tuesday's passenger load indicated more travellers taking to flights compared to Monday.

Airlines also began operating from Andhra Pradesh on Tuesday while flights will resume in West Bengal from Thursday that is expected to increase the passenger traffic.

Officials said several of the flights operated on Monday were half empty.
IndiGo airline said one of the passengers who travelled on its Chennai-Coimbatore flight on Monday evening has tested positive for Covid-19.

The low-cost carrier said the passenger was sitting with all precautionary measures like gloves, mask and face shield and he is currently quarantined at a Coimbatore medical facility.

The 24-year-old man has been since shifted to the ESI Hospital for further treatment, officials said.

Though the other passengers in the flight tested negative, they are likely to be home quarantined for 14 days, they said. The exact number of passengers was not known but sources said it could be around 100.
27/05/20 Business Standard
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Flying on Air India? Read these new rules before you board the flight

National carrier Air India resumed domestic flight operations from May 25 after a gap of 2 months amid nationwide lockdown which was imposed in order to contain the spread of coronavirus.

With the resumption of passenger flights, the national carrier has designed a set of guidelines for passengers.
See these operating guidelines that will have to be ensured by the cabin crew inside the aircraft >>

Day 2: Airline operations smoother, but AI faces ire

New Delhi/Mumbai: Operations at India's airports were smoother on the second day after the chaos that marked the resumption of domestic flights on Monday. The number of flights increased, more people flew and additional destinations opened up. Airlines got better at managing travellers, although there were complaints about state-run carrier Air India. Flights were cancelled on Tuesday as well, leaving travellers stranded.
Carriers operated 325 departures and carried more than 41,500 passengers until 5 pm on Tuesday, the aviation ministry said. Domestic airlines operated 438 flights and carried 30,000 passengers until midnight on Monday, the first day of flight operations after two months, the government said. A senior airline executive said faster turnarounds facilitated the progressive addition in capacity on day two.
While departures at Delhi airport rose to 137 from 112 on Monday, Mumbai maintained its cap of 25 departures per day, said spokespersons at India’s two busiest airports. Vistara added eight flights to its 20 departures on Monday and IndiGoNSE 2.50 % also added an unspecified number.
IndiGo and other carriers also deployed more staff to take care of passengers. Many had arrived at airports Monday without checking in online, mandatory under revised rules, or having downloaded the Aarogya Setu app or updated their information on it. Some airlines are insisting that passengers should have the contact-tracing app on their phones although the government has said it isn’t mandatory and a selfdeclaration will also suffice. “IndiGo, which deploys 670 people at Mumbai airport on normal days, deployed 20% of that on Monday and kept the rest on standby. Today, the airline increased it by 20 odd people,” said Charnel D’Souza, head of airports, western region, IndiGo. Airports in Andhra Pradesh saw operation resume on Tuesday. West Bengal is expected to allow the resumption of flights on Thursday.
27/05/20 Economic Times

How clean is the air you breathe on a plane?

You have washed your hands, sanitised your bags, put on gloves and masks and shields. But once you get on a plane, what about the air you breathe?
Can COVID-19 or any other virus circulate through the air conditioning on a plane? Since flyers across the world are anxious, here is a quick explainer >>

Middle Seat Row: After SC's taunt, govt says citizens' health of paramount importance

The government on Wednesday responded to the Supreme Court’s remarks over the middle seat row in flights, saying that for the Centre, the health of citizens was of “paramount importance”.

The government was responding to the court as it heard a plea from Air India seeking relaxations for operating the Vande-Bharat flights to bring back stranded passengers.

The government also briefed the court that the issue of allowing seating on middle rows is currently being deliberated on. Solicitor General Tushar Mehta submitted that the government had formed an expert committee and that it would consider all aspects before making recommendations to the Centre.

The Supreme Court, however, refused to offer any relaxations in its previous orders. The SC had earlier directed that Vande-Bharat flights can continue with middle row seating till June 6.

The SC noted that any further orders would add to confusion. The court also observed that while it wasn’t entirely pleased with flying back Indians on flights that allowed middle row seating, it would allow for these non-scheduled flights till June 6.

The SC said that the onus of deciding the issue was with the Bombay HC and that it should be trusted to make a final decision. The Bombay HC will take up the case of middle row seating on June 2.

On May 25, the SC had expressed its displeasure at the government allowing passengers to be seated in middle rows. The court had reprimanded the Centre for allowing flight operations while allowing bookings on middle seats in flights. The SC had also cautioned the govt that it should be more concerned about the health of its citizens rather than the health of airlines.

The SC had, on May 25, widened the scope of the issue to all flights -- international and domestic -- and aimed at the govt while observing that it was common sense to ensure that social distancing is maintained. The SC noted that sitting shoulder to shoulder in flights could be dangerous.
27/05/20 Ashmit Kumar/CNBC TV18

Domestic flight services in India: 445 flights carrying 62,641 passengers operated on May 26, says Hardeep Singh Puri

A total of 445 domestic flights, carrying 62,641 passengers, were operated on Tuesday, Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said on Wednesday, asserting that airports functioned smoothly on the second day after recommencement of domestic air travel in India.
Services were resumed on Monday after a gap of two months and 428 flights were operated within the country on the same day. All scheduled domestic services were suspended in India from March 25 to May 24 due to restrictions in the wake of the novel coronavirus pandemic.

“Our skies & airports are busy again. On 26th May, the 2nd day of recommencement of domestic passenger flights in India, our airports handled 62,641 flyers on 445 departures & 447 arrivals. All airport functioning was smooth. Only 6 departures were rescheduled,” Puri said on Twitter.
Domestic passenger flights are currently permitted to operate from all airports in the country except the ones in West Bengal. West Bengal had opposed the resumption of domestic flights from Monday as it had recently been hit by cyclone Amphan.
On Sunday night, the central government announced that domestic passenger flights will begin in West Bengal from Thursday. Other states like Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Tamil Nadu had also opposed the resumption of flights due to the rising number of COVID-19 cases. Therefore, on Sunday night, the central government had said that airports in these states will be handling a significantly reduced number of daily flights from Monday onwards.  This led to hundreds of last-minute flight cancellations, causing immense problems for flyers.
27/05/20 PTI/Financial Express

Aviation services on path to normalcy

Aviation services in the country stabilised considerably on Tuesday with Mumbai airport operating 44 flights out of the allocated 50 flights and catering to 4,224 passengers travelling to 13 destinations.
Six airlines operated a total of 22 departures and 22 arrivals. “Mumbai airport saw today a total of 4,224 passengers, which include 3,114 passengers at departures and 1,110 at arrivals. The highest passenger load capacity was seen on the Delhi route. The first flight departed to Ranchi at 6.30 am while the first flight arrived at 8.20 am from Lucknow. Both the flights were operated by IndiGo,” a Mumbai International Airport Ltd spokesperson said.
On Monday, the airport had operated 47 flights with a different distribution of sectors. On Tuesday, IndiGo got the maximum share of the sectors operating 21 pair of flights to and fro to Ahmedabad, Bhubaneshwar, Dehradun, Guwahati, Lucknow, Patna, Ranchi, Nagpur. IndiGo and Vistara operated
two pairs of flights to Delhi. Air India and Air Asia India, which had operated two flights to and from Kochi and Delhi on Monday, were allocated Bengaluru and Delhi sectors on Tuesday. Low-cost carrier SpiceJet operated flights to and from Bengaluru, Delhi, Varanasi, Patna, Gorakhpur. Alliance
Air operated the lone flight to Diu.
Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri had claimed on May 25 that a total of 832 flights were operated by all airlines and a total of 58,318 people were flown to their destinations.
While aviation experts have been sceptical of resumption of 33 per cent of domestic flights, the reopening of airports across the country received its first setback after a passenger on IndiGo 6E 381 Chennai-Coimbatore tested positive after tests carried out at Coimbatore airport on Monday evening.
In a statement, IndiGo said, “We received confirmation from the Coimbatore airport doctor that a passenger who travelled on 6E 381 from Chennai to Coimbatore on May 25 evening, has tested positive for Covid-19. He is currently quarantined at ESI state medical facility at Coimbatore. He was seated on-board the aircraft with all precautionary measures including face mask, face shield and gloves, as were the other passengers. Additionally, no one else was seated in his vicinity, significantly reducing the possibility of transmission.”
The airline said as per the protocols for airlines, the aircraft operating this flight was immediately disinfected. “The operating crew has been home quarantined for 14 days and we are in the process of notifying other passengers as per the government guidelines, to ensure safety of our passengers and
staff,” the airline said. Tamil Nadu, which has the second highest Covid-19 cases after Maharashtra, has also limited its domestic flights to 25 arrivals and departures and has included an e-pass for entry and 14-day home quarantine in its standard operating procedures.
27/05/20 Satish Nandagaonkar/Mumbai Mirror

Steps to follow if someone on your flight tests positive for COVID-19

As domestic flights resume after two months, there have been reports of passengers testing positive for coronavirus after completing a flight journey.

Read what should you do if a passenger, pilot or cabin crew member on your flight tests positive for COVID-19 >>

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Cancellations continue, passenger flights resume in Andhra Pradesh

New Delhi: A day after the restart of air travel across India, flight cancellations continued with passengers facing difficulties, even as domestic operations resumed in Andhra Pradesh on Tuesday amid reluctance due to rising number of COVID-19 cases.

Except West Bengal, domestic flights traversed the entire country on Tuesday.

However, as major airports like Mumbai, Chennai and Hyderabad have a severe cap on the number of fights they can handle, cancellations continued on Tuesday.

Just like Monday, a section of passengers reached their airports on Tuesday only to be informed that their flights have been cancelled. Many people vented their ire on social media.

Chennai airport is scheduled to handle only 20 arrivals and departures each on Tuesday, said senior government officials, even though Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri on Sunday night said that it can handle up to 25 arrivals per day and has no limit on the number of departures.

Even in Andhra Pradesh, where domestic services resumed on Tuesday, Vijayawada and Vizag airports will handle just eight flights each during the day, officials said.

On Sunday night, the central government had said these two airports can handle up to 20 per cent of the pre-lockdown flights from Tuesday onwards.

The Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi, which is India''s largest, is scheduled to handle around 277 flights on Tuesday, the officials said.

On May 23, the government officials had said they expected Delhi airport to handle around 380 flights per day from May 25 onwards.

Mumbai airport, India''s second busiest airport, handled just 47 flights on Monday and is expected to handle a similar number on Tuesday.

On Sunday night, the central government said it will handle a maximum of 50 flights per day from Monday.

West Bengal would be resuming domestic flights from Thursday.

However, its Kolkata and Bagdogra airports will handle only 20 flights each per day.

On Sunday night, the central government had announced that Andhra Pradesh and West Bengal will not handle any domestic flights on Monday and major airports like Mumbai, Chennai and Hyderabad will see reduced operations from Monday onwards.

West Bengal, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Tamil Nadu had expressed reluctance in resuming domestic flights from Monday due to rising number of COVID-19 cases.

The officials said the first flight on Tuesday to Vijayawada landed from Bengaluru at 6.55 am, carrying 79 passengers. The Spicejet flight returned to Bengaluru with 68 passengers, they added.

At the Vizag airport, the first flight landed from Bengaluru at 7 am.

"At Vijayawada, four flights are of IndiGo, two each are of SpiceJet and Air India," they added.

Visakhapatnam airport is scheduled to handle eight flights on Wednesday, the officials mentioned.

After a two-month suspension due to the coronavirus pandemic, domestic flights resumed in India on Monday with 532 flights carrying 39,231 passengers to their destinations. Around 630 flights were cancelled.
26/05/20 PTI/Outlook

Day 2 of domestic operations: 325 departures till 5 pm, cancellations continue

New Delhi: Airports across the country handled 325 departures and 283 arrivals with 41,673 passengers till 5 pm on Tuesday even as flight cancellations continued with passengers facing difficulties.

Moreover, domestic operations resumed in Andhra Pradesh on Tuesday, a day after the restart of air travel across India.

West Bengal was the only state where no domestic services took place.

As major airports like Mumbai, Chennai and Hyderabad have a severe cap on the number of fights they can handle, cancellations continued on Tuesday.

Just like Monday, a section of passengers reached their airports on Tuesday only to be informed that their flights have been cancelled. Many people vented their ire on social media.

"Smooth operations of domestic civil aviation operation. Our airports have handled 325 departures & 283 arrivals with 41,673 passengers till 5pm on 26 May 2020, the second day after recommencement of domestic flight," Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said on Tuesday.

"Final report for the day will be prepared after details come in at midnight," he added.

Chennai airport was scheduled to handle only 20 arrivals and departures each on Tuesday, said senior government officials, even though Puri on Sunday night said that it can handle up to 25 arrivals per day and has no limit on the number of departures.

Even in Andhra Pradesh, where domestic services resumed on Tuesday, Vijayawada and Vizag airports were scheduled to handle just eight flights each during the day, officials said.

On Sunday night, the central government had said these two airports can handle up to 20 per cent of the pre-lockdown flights from Tuesday onwards.

The Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi, which is India''s largest, was scheduled to handle around 277 flights on Tuesday, the officials said, adding that around 25 flights were cancelled during the day.

On May 23, the government officials had said they expected Delhi airport to handle around 380 flights per day from May 25 onwards.

Mumbai airport, India''s second busiest airport, handled just 41 flights on Tuesday. On Monday, it had handled 47 flights.

On Sunday night, the central government had clarified that Mumbai will handle a maximum of 50 flights per day from Monday.
26/05/20 PTI/Outlook

‘Heavily sanitised airport and airplane’: How I finally travelled from Delhi to Bhopal battling COVID-19 scare

Strange are the ways of the world. Bhopal suddenly seemed far and distant since the nationwide COVID-19 lockdown was announced on 24th March 2020. An hour and a half’s flight or an overnight train away, a weekend hop to met folks, family and friends often, the 750 odd kilometres between Delhi and Bhopal seemed to carry the weight of distance now.
 -Nanditta Chibber, who waited for almost two months to take a flight back home from Delhi, tells about the journey she finally made >>

Fear of airline bankruptcies triggered knee-jerk opening; but states not playing ball

Precarious and worsening financials of some of India's biggest airlines, including the state-owned Air India's - may have been a key reason behind the Centre's sudden decision to start flights even before working out crucial details with state governments.

With states refusing to play ball, some due to political rivalry while others for fear of spreading coronavirus, it's the unsuspecting flyer who is bearing the brunt of the Centre-state disharmony.

Keeping the passengers' issue aside for a moment, the question that arises is: why did Centre restart commercial flights without consulting state governments? Why was there a rush to re-start flight operations without tying up the loose ends? An aviation analyst points out the Union Civil Aviation Ministry was perhaps anticipating bankruptcies in the sector, particularly for some carriers, if the airlines stayed grounded for a few more weeks.

Airlines like SpiceJet and GoAir are literally on a wing and a prayer. SpiceJet, for instance, had negative net worth of Rs 773.4 crore in December 2019. As per Mumbai-based Centrum Broking, SpiceJet is expected to report net loss of Rs 1,178 crore in FY20 which is more than the annual net profits that the airline has ever generated since it was acquired by Ajay Singh in 2015. The no-frills airline was incurring some of the costs - employee expenses and depreciation - even when it was grounded for two months during the lockdown. As a result, it reportedly paid only part salaries for most employees while sending others on furloughs to bring down the fixed costs.
Domestic carriers are losing Rs 75-90 crore per day, and their debt level is expected to rise to Rs 46,500 crore in FY22, according to rating agency ICRA. Airlines have a long list of creditors (lessors, airports, oil companies) who are waiting to get paid. They also have Rs 3,700 crore of pending refunds to the passengers. Some airlines have stopped paying staff salaries from April.

Ironically, just two days before formally giving a go-ahead signal, Union Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri had tweeted that it's not up to the civil aviation ministry alone to decide on resuming domestic flights. "In the spirit of cooperative federalism, the government of states where these flights will take off and land should be ready to allow civil aviation operations," Puri had tweeted on May 19.

It seems that the minister was aware of a probable resentment from some state governments for these flights. By putting a start date, the minister has perhaps worked backwards in convincing 'opposing states'. His strategy of doing a formal launch (on May 21) paid off because otherwise it would have been challenging for the central government to bring these states on the same page. But why did states agree? In a pandemic like this, no state government can afford to abandon its natives when a majority of other states would not be doing so.
26/05/20  Manu Kaushik/Business Today

How to fly again without fear

As India opened up its domestic skies partially on Monday, some fliers, airlines and airports got a feel of what flying in the post-Covid environment is going to be like.

However, as more countries remove flying restrictions world over, the global aviation sector is confronted with a big question: how do airlines, aircraft manufacturers, airports and others connected with the sector get back fliers by convincing them that it is safe to fly again in the post-Covid 19 world?

American aircraft manufacturer Boeing wants flyers to feel comfortable that the planes are safely disinfected and that the cabin air quality is clean and it is a good environment to be in. To achieve this, Boeing is taking a multi-layered approach that involves working with airports and airlines to make sure that the cabins are properly disinfected.

“Many airlines and regulatory authorities are asking passengers to wear face coverings and asking cabin crew to wear masks for that extra layer of protection. We will encourage people to feel safe once these protective measures are all in place,” Jim Hass, Director, Product Marketing, Boeing, said in a global media conference call, adding, “We want to reinforce that flying is one of the safest ways of travel. With the multi-layers of protection from the airport to the planes, we want passengers to get on a plane without hesitation.”

Nick Careen, IATA’s Senior Vice-President, Airport, Passenger, Cargo and Security, agrees.

In his conference call with global media he said that there is no silver bullet for the pandemic and hence a multi-layered approach is the way forward.

Pre-boarding procedures
IATA foresees several layers of protective measures, including access to the terminal at the departure airport being restricted to airport/airline workers (with exceptions being made for those accompanying passengers with disabilities or unaccompanied minors) and self-service options for check-in being used by passengers as much as possible to reduce contact points and queues.

Remote check-ins and automated bag drop are also being considered. IATA also suggests that, where possible in the pre-flight stage, more detailed passenger information should be available so that tracing a passenger who might be infected by the coronavirus is easier.

In-flight part of journey
For the inflight part of the journey, IATA foresees several layers of protective measures, including face covering required for all passengers and non-surgical masks for crew and simplified cabin service, and pre-packaged catering to reduce interaction between passengers and the crew.

At the arrival airport, IATA sees several layers of protective measures, including accelerated processing and baggage reclaim to enable social distancing by reducing congestion and queuing.

In addition, Boeing is also working at developing new technologies such as anti-microbial surfaces and ultra violet light disinfectants. “If a virus or a bacteria lands on the anti-microbial surface then the coating on the surface will eventually destroy the virus or bacteria,” Hass said, adding that this can be applied to in-service on flights.

This technology is available with some manufacturers either as a spray or a paint-on coating.

“It is a supplement procedure that a number of airlines are looking at. It does not take the place of disinfecting. The anti-microbial coating that airlines can put on or spray lasts depending on the coating, from 30 days to a year or more. It is a longer-term coating, it is not a between-flight coating,” he said.

Boeing’s strategy might just be what passengers are looking for. A survey on “Passenger in Focus post-Covid 19,’’ by Aerotech Support Services points out that 90 per cent of the people surveyed opted for regular sanitisation of all touch points and washrooms.

All these steps are needed as, according to Careen, the industry is beginning to see passengers come back. “It varies from country to country. Some of the countries where the pandemic originated are seeing traffic picking again. We are seeing it happen, possibly more domestically at first than international travel. But it is starting to come back,” he said.

However, Aerotech’s survey says that fliers’ confidence in terms of safe, secure and reliable flying is yet to be restored and remains an area of concern.

The survey shows that almost half of those surveyed preferred travelling after six months of flights resuming and they wanted the cost of PPE (personal protective equipment) to form part of the flight ticket.

Measures at airports
Airports too are looking at offering more contactless travel options for passengers. Some airports already have strict measures in place. For example, London’s Heathrow airport is asking passengers not to come to the airport unless they are travelling, adding that those passengers who do come into the terminals for essential travel need to adhere to the UK government's two-metre social distancing guidelines.

Additionally, Heathrow is also asking passengers to arrive at least two hours before a European flight and three hours before a long-haul flight. It is also reminding passengers that the Foreign Commonwealth Office advises against all but essential foreign travel.

Similarly, Hamad airport in Doha is recommending that a passenger arrive three hours before the departure of the flight. But e-gates at the airport are currently not available. In addition, most food and beverages outlets are shut, with those that are open maintaining strict social distancing norms.

Besides, escalators, moving walkalators, elevators, complementary baby strollers and prayer rooms are unavailable to passengers.
26/05/20 Ashwini Phadnis/Business Line

Aviation Ministry gives revised figures, says 428 domestic passenger flights operated on Monday

New Delhi: A total of 428 domestic passenger flights operated on Monday, clarified the Civil Aviation Ministry on Tuesday, hours after Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said 832 flights operated on the day.

An excel sheet issued by the ministry on Tuesday evening stated that 428 domestic flights carrying 30,550 passengers departed for their destinations on Monday. It also showed 404 of the 428 flights arrived at their destinations on Monday itself.

Remaining 28 flights reached their destinations on Tuesday (after midnight) after departing from their origin city on Monday (just before midnight).

The ministry''s clarification came on Tuesday after Puri said on Twitter, "Airports are abuzz and passengers are back in the air. 58,318 passengers flew to their destinations on 832 flights on the first day, 25th May till midnight."

A departure is considered as one "flight". Puri had quoted the 832 "flight movements" - which is a sum of departures (428 in this case) and arrivals (404 in this case) - of Monday as "flights".

Meanwhile, the figures shared by the ministry through the excel sheet on the total number of Monday''s flights were lower than the figures shared by Puri on Monday evening.

On Monday evening, Puri had said on Twitter, "From no domestic passenger flights yesterday to 532 flights and 39,231 passengers today, action has returned to Indian skies."

IndiGo, India''s largest carrier that had around 50 per cent share in the domestic market in the pre-lockdown era, said on Monday it is operating just above 200 flights per day till May-end.

Vistara said on Tuesday it operated 20 flights on Monday. Air India officials said they operated approximately 60 flights on Monday.

All carriers except GoAir operated their flights on Monday and Tuesday.
26/05/20 PTI/Outlook

Flyers, airlines grapple with new rules; glitches and lack of transport on day 1 of flights resumption

New Delhi: India’s stricken aviation industry on Monday overcame last-minute government flip-flops and mass cancellations to successfully ferry a disparate group of passengers including adults, teenagers and even a young kid who travelled alone to their destinations on the first full day of normal flight operations after a two-month shutdown. But the day was also marked by uncertainty and chaos at airports as airlines, acting on last-minute instructions from the government, cancelled nearly half the flights that were supposed to depart leaving many irate passengers in the lurch.
Airports resembled hospital wards as passengers and air crew donned full face masks and other protective gear with the Covid-19 scare continuing to paralyse most parts of the country and its economy. India’s airlines flew only 532 flights and 39,231 passengers on Monday, which is over half of 830 flights approved by the government last week and a fifth of about 2,500 daily flights before the shutdown in March.
Indigo alone operated about 240 flights on Monday. Airlines said the operations were handled well considering the short span of time the government gave them to restart flights.
“Operations appear to have been handled well by airports and airlines, no thanks to the government that only created confusion and obstacles,” said an airlines executive on condition of anonymity.
In a change of stance late on Sunday, the government slashed the number of flights airlines can operate following objections by various states. This forced airlines to cancel about 410 flights with a few hours remaining for operations to resume. Many passengers got SMSes and emails after midnight and early on Monday morning while some others were informed only at the airport.
26/05/20 Anirban Chowdhury/Mihir Mishra/Economic Times

Planes take off post two-month hiatus in Vijaywada

Vijayawada, in Andhra Pradesh, received its first flight on Tuesday post Corona lockdown. Earlier, the state government had been reluctant to resume flights in view of Covid19 cases rising every day. The first flight to Vijayawada landed from Bengaluru at 6.55 am, carrying 79 passengers. The Spicejet flight returned to Bengaluru with 68 passengers, officials said. The Union government on Sunday announced that Andhra Pradesh and West Bengal would not handle domestic flights. However, in what appears to be a change of heart, the state allowed flights. At Andhra’s other airport in Vizag, the first flight landed this morning at 7 am.

The Civil aviation ministry ordered that flights be resumed across India from May 25. Initially, even Maharashtra said it would not allow domestic flights given the Covid density in the city opf Mumbai. However, Monday witnessed reduced flights being handled at airports in Mumbai. A similar trend is being observed in Chennai and Hyderabad.
Suspended for over two months due to the coronavirus pandemic, domestic flights resumed in India on Monday with 532 flights. These flights carried 39,231 passengers to their respective destinations. However, there were around 630 flights cancellations as well.

The central government’s decision to resume flights has led to various state governments announcing state specific guidelines on quarantine of passengers landing in their city. The quarantine period varies from one week to two weeks with provision also for paid quarantine in some states. A distinction has been made by some states in business travelers and non- business travelers.
26/05/20 Financial Express

Fearful, frenetic, furious flyers

From a distance, rarely has Terminal 2 of the Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai looked so calm and orderly at any given time of the day or night. There are barely a couple of hundred passengers waiting patiently to get inside the terminal building, while the airport security staff completes the arduous checks of passengers, their tickets, their mobile phone for the Aarogya Setu app and of course temperature monitoring before being allowed inside.

But go a bit closer and you discover that there is total chaos and confusion as some passengers squat beside the entrance gates since their flight has been cancelled and others are not sure if their flight will take off. A couple that has downloaded Aarogya Setu only on one telephone is arguing with the security personnel that as their PNR is the same, one Aarogya Setu should be enough. There are others who are starving and thirsty as the eateries outside the terminal are closed.

But above all, one emotion seems to be common amongst all. Apprehensions or even fear about catching Covid-19 due to the travel, even if everyone seems well prepared in terms of preventive measures such as masks, gloves, sanitisers as well as a face shield or even a PPE kit in the rare case.

However, for most passengers, the immediate headache was lack of clarity about the status of their flight. ‘‘My flight was at 11:05 am with Air India and it got cancelled. I arrived at the airport at 8 am. When I reached the airport, I was informed that the flight had been cancelled. The airline did not inform us. I am not the only one facing this issue. There are I think hundreds who are facing the same issue. And now after almost eight hours of wait I get a boarding pass for a flight at 10 pm. It’s more than 12 hours of wait. We’ll reach Delhi at 12:15 but the curfew in Delhi starts at 7 pm. We don’t know if we would get any authorised taxis over there or not,’’ says Vaibhav Thakur, a final-year student at the Indian Institute of Hotel Management in Mumbai.

Thakur says he was obliged to go back as he had been stuck in the city for over two months since the lockdown began. ‘‘I have tried to get back home for a long time. I tried the Shramik Special train but that had lots of paperwork involved and those trains were giving preference to the migrant labourers. So I decided to stay back as it was safe. Since the government has assured that flights are going to be safe, I have taken full precautions and I am ready to board the flight,’’ he tells Media India Group.

Just beside Thakur is another young traveller, Sunil Sharma, who works in a start-up in Mumbai but finds himself obliged to go back to his family in Gurgaon near New Delhi as he is running out of cash as his company has not paid him since the lockdown began. ‘‘I am not getting my salary for the past two months and I can’t pay my rent anymore. I am a little concerned about taking the flights as there are safety issues but still we have to take precautions and leave as there’s no money left with us anymore. I have downloaded the Aarogya Setu app and am carrying masks and sanitisers. But we don’t know how the app is going to help. If someone has a fever and they say that they don’t, the app won’t be able to detect it. But since they have made it mandatory to travel we don’t have any option,’’ says Sharma.

The fear of contracting the dreaded disease does seem to run through practically all travellers, who say they have little option but to fly despite the risk. ‘‘I have been stuck here for the past two months and now I am going back home. My Air India flight got rescheduled to 10 pm. It was supposed to be at 5 pm. I have done my homework to be able to catch the flight and have everything that is needed. I am a little scared but I am careful and am keeping my distance from people,’’ says Priya, a finance professional from New Delhi who had got stuck in Mumbai.
25/05/20 MIG

Resumption of domestic flights to help in reviving aviation industry: SOTC Travel

The resumption of domestic passenger flight services after a gap of two months is a favourable move in reviving the aviation sector, SOTC Travel said on Monday.

Domestic flights resumed operations on Monday under strict norms. All commercial passenger flights were suspended with effect from March 25, when the country came under a lockdown to curb the spread of COVID-19.
“As the Indian skies opens up today for domestic passenger services, the calibrated opening up of domestic routes is a favourable move in reviving the aviation industry,” SOTC Travel MD Vishal Suri said.
The resumption of flights adhering to all health and safety rules will encourage travel, he added.

“With the capping airfares we look forward to more passengers travelling due to affordable ticket prices,” Suri said, adding that the recommencing of operations will also aid in the revival of corporate MICE (meetings, incentives, conferences and exhibitions).
SOTC Travel Ltd is a step-down subsidiary of Fairfax Financial Holdings Group and is held through its Indian listed subsidiary Thomas Cook (India) Ltd (TCIL).
25/05/20 PTI/Financial Express

Getting back in the cockpit after a long break

As India partially resumes its flights after a lockdown of over 10 weeks on flying, pilots other than those who operated cargo and evacuation flights during the lockdown will be entering the cockpit after weeks.

While there are no official figures, it is estimated that between 80 and 85 per cent of the pilots in India had not been inside a cockpit since March 25, when the ban on domestic and international flights started. In regular times, the rules of the Directorate General of Civil Aviation stipulate that the maximum flight time limitation for pilots is 35 hours in seven consecutive days and 100 hours in 28 consecutive days or pilots have to complete so many hours of flying in a week and a month.

Given that the pilots had not been flying when they got back to their routines, they not only have to handle the social distancing and other protective norms put in place in the post Covid 19 aviation sector but, more importantly, they also have to ensure that they are up to date with their skills. This is important as some pilots maintain that there are certain normal Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) that need to be adhered to, to ensure nothing is missed in setting up for the flight and completing it safely.

“Since you haven’t done it for a while, you get a little out of practice, so you need to refresh your memory before you finally step into the cockpit,” said one pilot, adding that the rustiness passes very soon depending on the experience that the pilot has.

Another pilot pointed out that you counteract this by being very cautious and conservative on the initial flights. “The focus is more on being stable on approach early instead of on fuel saving by taking flaps and gear out a little later in the approach,” he explained. Flaps are high lift devices. They move down to increase the curvature of the wing which increases lift. But as they move down further for landing, the drag increases proportionately.

Similarly, as you lower the landing gear, it causes increased drag as it is sticking out from under the aircraft and spoiling the streamlined flow of air around the aircraft’s main body. The increase in thrust (engine power) required to overcome this drag causes a higher fuel flow. Thus, the aim is to delay both the extension of the flaps to landing position and lowering the landing gear as late as safely possible.
26/05/20 Ashwini Phadnis/Business Line

Paytm records over 8.5 million Flight searches as India allows limited domestic flights during lockdown

The enforcement of the nationwide lockdown caused many people to be stranded away from their hometowns, as bans were imposed on every mode of travel. Now that the government has provided some relaxations and allowed domestic air travel to resume in certain regions, people are flying more than ever before, Paytm says. Its online travel booking platform registered over 8.5 million flight searches in a matter of days.

Paytm notes that the rise in demand is pretty evident, as it is witnessing “close to 200% of the average daily search volume witnessed before the lockdown began in March,” the company said in a press release. The platform also reports that most of these searches are from people travelling to tier 2 cities from metropolitans, thus establishing a clear trend.

During the last three days, the company witnessed the peak point in flight search, with about 177K requests processed in an hour.

The lockdown, and the subsequent easing of the lockdown, has changed the aviation industry in India and globally, at least for the time being. Paytm notes that otherwise busy routes, like Delhi-Mumbai and Bangalore-DelhI, have been replaced by heavy traffic on routes like Delhi-Patna, Mumbai-Varanasi, Bengaluru-Guwahati. “Due to the last three consecutive lockdowns, several travellers had to stay back in metro cities mainly New Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru which they might have visited for some work. They are now taking this opportunity to book a flight back to their home towns in non-metro cities including Patna, Jaipur, Lucknow, Ahmedabad, Varanasi, Guwahati, among other,” the release said.
25/05/20 Upneet Singh/Techportal

More than 58,300 passengers flew on Day 1; 832 flights operated

A total of 58,318 passengers flew to their destinations on May 25, when India's domestic flight services resumed after a gap of two months. As many as 832 flights were operated on Monday.

Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said, "Airports are abuzz & passengers are back in air".
Meanwhile, on Tuesday, domestic flight operations resumed in Andhra Pradesh. A SpiceJet flight from Bengaluru landed in Gannavaram of Krishna district. Puri tweeted, "Operations have started in Andhra Pradesh from today. These numbers are all set to soar higher".

Moreover, West Bengal will restart flight operation on May 28, Thursday.

The first flight on Monday took off from Delhi for Pune at 4.45 am under strict regulations as recommended by civil aviation authorities. The first flight from Mumbai was to Patna at 6.45 am.

Yesterday, the aviation ministry also permitted chartered flights to resume their operations.

The ministry said "non-scheduled and private operators" of fixed-wing aircraft, helicopters and micro-light aircraft can resume their domestic flights from May 25 onwards.

The government last week announced the resumption of domestic flight services from May under specific rules and guidelines. It asked airlines to cap ticket pricing, ensure that passengers wear face masks, and that no food is served onboard planes. The ministry also asked travellers to declare that they are fit to fly through the Aarogya Setu app or by filling up of a self-declaration form.
26/05/20 Business Today

630 flights cancelled on first day

New Delhi: The first day of the resumption of domestic commercial flights in the country had its fare share of challenges, leading to chaos at almost all major airports as nearly 630 flights were cancelled due to states’ restrictions and airline operational issues. The confusion was further compounded by a variety of quarantine protocols by state governments, leaving several flyers high and dry.
The government had on May 21 announced the resumption of domestic flights from May 25 after a gap of nearly two months in the wake of the Covid-induced nationwide lockdown.
The two busiest airports Delhi and Mumbai witnessed cancellation of nearly 80 and 20 flights, respectively. Officials at Indira Gandhi International Airport, Delhi, said the cancellations were mostly on account of some states, including West Bengal and Andhra Pradesh, refusing to allow flight operations and also because of some operational issues like low load factor faced by airline operators.
“Around 80 flights to and from Delhi have been cancelled. The IGI airport was scheduled to handle a total of 125 departures and 118 arrivals today,” an official said. The Mumbai airport, the country’s second busiest airport after Delhi, was supposed to initially handle 175 flights daily. It curtailed them to 50 yesterday, and today further cancelled 20 flights.
Andhra Pradesh did not allow flight operations today; it will begin services from tomorrow while West Bengal will resume them from May 28. The two states have two airports each.
Smaller airports too had their share of cancellations, and had passengers complaining that they were not informed until they arrived at airports. Air India, in particular, has received criticism on social media for lack of communication with its passengers.
25/05/20 Mukesh Ranjan/Tribune