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AI-Indian a blip on competition radar

Last updated on: March 05, 2007 10:26 IST

Even as the government is aiming at creating an airline behemoth to take on Asian tigers such as Singapore Airlines and Thai Airways, the merged Air-India and Indian Airlines entity will not dominate even the Indian skies.

India's private sector carriers have already become a force to reckon with and could gain in clout if allowed to fly international routes.

The total fleet of the unified entity constitutes 30 per cent of the total number of aircraft owned by Indian carriers. While the combined turnover of the merged entity is over 50 per cent of the Indian carriers' turnover, it accounts for only 26 per cent of passengers.

The combined revenue of Air India and Indian Airlines is around Rs 16,000 crore (Rs 160 billion), while they flew 11.7 million passengers in the last financial year.

The merged entity will, however, have a larger share of airport infrastructure. The entity will control over 70 per cent of the real estate at airports (such as parking bays, hangars and maintenance slots) in Mumbai and Delhi.

According to current statistics, the entity will control 25 per cent share in parking bays at the two metro airports, Delhi and Mumbai and will also own over 60 per cent of engineering services centres in the country.

  Air 
India
Indian
 
Airlines
Merged
entity
Share in
total industry
No of Aircraft 48 74 122 30.50
Flights (daily) 35 300 335 25.75
Revenue (Rs cr) 9,677 6,000 15,677 53.00
Profit (Rs cr) 16.50 49.50 66.00

-

Parking slots* 20 20 40 25.00
Engineering services 3 2 5 62.50
Passengers (in mn) 4.7 7 11.7 26.00
New aircraft order 68 43 111 31.71
*Mumbai+Delhi

"Passengers carried are  less when one compares with major airlines in South East Asia," industry analysts said.

Singapore Airlines handles over 17 million passengers with just 90 planes, while Thai Air ferries 17.9 million with 85 planes. The total fleet size of Air-India and Indian Airlines is 122.

"The merger cannot be viewed in the context of mere numbers. The actual benefit will come from the synergies followed by a cost reduction," an Air India official said.

Take an example. Air-India and Indian Airlines operate over 10 flights a day to Singapore with an average load factor of 55 to 60 per cent.

"Post-merger, this could be curtailed to 5 flights with an 85 per cent load factor. Meanwhile, the merged entity can deploy additional capacity elsewhere to increase its network," the official added.

"The carriers can also cut short their human resources at overseas and domestic airports," added a government official.

P R Sanjai in Mumbai
Source: source image