India’s aviation boom fuels openings for new airline players

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India’s aviation boom fuels openings for new airline players | Latest Travel News


By Allison Lampert

MONTREAL (GWN) -India will require more authorities oversight as the nation’s airways take supply of hundreds of planes and its fast-growing market is creating openings for new players, the federal government’s aviation security chief told GWN.

India is wanting at “more responsibility, more safety oversight, more manpower,” with the quantity of industrial jets in the nation almost doubling over the last decade and with another 2,000 plane on order, director normal of civil aviation Faiz Ahmed Kidwai said in an interview on the sidelines of the U.N. aviation company’s triennial meeting in Montreal.

India is one of the world’s fastest-growing aviation markets, but the June crash of an Air India jetliner has intensified scrutiny of security requirements.

India also faces pilot shortages and a parliamentary committee not too long ago warned that inadequate labor at the air security regulator doubtlessly jeopardises security. In July, the regulator said it discovered 263 safety-related lapses at the nation’s airways.

While the nation’s aviation market is dominated largely by two airways, IndiGo and Air India, journey demand is creating the chance for new players.

“What we feel is that there is scope for more airlines because the way the sector is growing we need more players,” Kidwai said.

“If more carriers come, yes, they’ll have an opportunity.”

A record 174 million Indian domestic and international passengers flew in 2024, although that still pales in comparison to the 730 million passengers in China, International Air Transport Association data show.

The Air India plane crash in June, which left 260 people dead in the worst aviation disaster in a decade, has overshadowed India’s rapid rise as an aviation hub.

A preliminary investigation report released earlier by the Indian government showed pilot confusion in the cockpit shortly before the crash after the plane’s fuel engine switches had almost simultaneously flipped from run to cutoff just after takeoff.

India’s Supreme Court on Monday asked the government to respond to a plea seeking an independent investigation into the crash. Kidwai said the investigation remains under the purview of India’s Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau, in line with international protocols.

(Additional reporting by Aditya Kalra)

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