Sunday, September 04, 2011

India Inc looks to fly its biz jets below the radar

New Delhi: Business jets and chartered flights have been an unlikely victim of the recent corruption scandals involving India Inc. Businesses’ reluctance to splurge and show off has taken a heavy toll on general aviation, which includes aircraft not flown by the government or private airline companies (called scheduled operators) or the military.
According to figures from the Airports Authority of India (AAI), the growth of general aviation in terms of movements went into the red in the first quarter of this financial year. The sector saw a fall of 12.9 per cent in April-June this year, compared to a growth of 36.6 per cent during the same period last year.
Traffic movements (landing and take-off by planes) during the first quarter of this financial year fell to 63,000 from 72,000 during the same period last year. The sector saw a decline of 17.7 per cent in April, 15.6 per cent in May and 5.7 per cent in June.
“People who take chartered flights are mainly corporate personalities and politicians. Both sections have stopped taking chartered flights after the 2G scam, as everyone is under scrutiny by various intelligence organisations,” says Pradip Thampi, director, Executive Airways, a Mumbai-based aircraft charter company that rents out planes.
He says the fare for an eight-seater Mumbai-Delhi-Mumbai chartered flight is Rs 14 lakh — a seat cost of around Rs 175,000 — much higher than a return business class ticket between Delhi and Mumbai that costs Rs 18,000.
“No one wants to be seen paying so much for such short trips, which is why people are avoiding chartered flights,” says Thampi.
Subash Goyal, chairman, Stic, which provides chartered aircraft, feels the scam could be one of the reasons behind the fall in demand. “The scams in the recent past are one reason, but there are other factors too, such as the slowdown in the economy.”
05/09/11 Mihir Mishra/business Standard

To Read the News in full at Source, Click the Headline

0 comments:

Post a Comment