Tuesday, July 19, 2016

After recent plane order spree, India finds itself hard-pressed to find parking slots

At last week's Farnborough Air Show, an Indian carrier placed a $7.7 billion order while an additional $72 billion of contracts are in the offing. The next challenge: Finding landing and parking slots for these planes.
As air travel heats up in the world's fastest-growing major aviation market, infrastructure has failed to keep pace with traffic growth fueled by rising incomes and affordable fares. The average time an aircraft spends circling before it can land in Mumbai during peak hours is about 45 minutes to an hour, versus 25 minutes for Singapore and zero for Qatar, according to Dubai-based Martin Consulting LLC.
India plans to invest $5 billion to improve airport infrastructure, which is "inadequate" compared with China's proposal for $130 billion in 15 years, a June research paper by KPMG and the Associated Chambers of Commerce of India said. A proposal for a new airport in the outskirts of Mumbai has languished on the drawing board since 1997 even as Boeing Co. estimates Indian carriers need 1,740 aircraft over the next two decades.
"We need to move fast," Sanjiv Kapoor, chief commercial officer of Vistara, a local unit of Singapore Airlines Ltd., said in an interview. "That's a huge issue. You cannot have a commercial capital and a political capital that do not have slots available for growth," he said, referring to Mumbai and New Delhi.
Out of the nation's 450 airstrips and airports, only 75 handle commercial airlines, with the rest remaining idle or rarely used because of weak demand, according to the government. The lack of facilities may force carriers to defer deliveries, hurting planemakers including Boeing and Airbus Group SE.
18/07/16 Anurag Kotoky/Bloomberg/Economic Times

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