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Indian Aviation - The Road Head for Air Hostesses
Aviation
sector in India for
several decades has suffered
from flawed regulatory and operational policies that were designed
solely to keep competition away, The Govt did adopt an 'open sky'
policy in 1991 but this proved to be relatively ineffective
because the civil aviation environment then was not conducive for
sustaining a high-quality
competitive level. As a result, many startup airlines exited the
industry within a short time, However, far-reaching reforms in the
civil aviation sector aimed at making flying more affordable
gathered momentum as 2004 came to a clos As a result, India's civil aviation has witnessed an unprecedented boom. Finally in 2005 the aviation sector was freed of bureaucratic shackles and stifling Government restrictions, the industry is now poised to expand by leaps and bounds. The recent Government announcements regarding the much-awaited fleet acquisition program of Indian public sector airlines as well as for modernisation of the infrastructure at Indian airports have given the process a further fillip. Aircraft Acquisitions
At present, existing private domestic carriers as well as the new startups have a total of 337 aircraft on order, mostly Boeing and Airbus variants and some ATR and Embraer aircraft. Of these, as many as 156 were ordered at the Paris air show in June. IndiGo leads the list with a firm order for 100 A320s with deliveries slated for late 2006; between 15 and 19 aircraft in the first two years, and thereafter an average of one aircraft every month. Air Deccan is close behind with orders for 68 additional aircraft comprising 32 ATR 72/42s and 32 A320s. Kingfisher Airlines became the first Indian carrier to sign a firm contract with Airbus for five each of its newest aircraft, the A350-800 and its largest, the A380 for intercontinental services as well as for five A330-200s for regional routes. Delivery of the A330s is due to begin in the third quarter of 2007, those of the double-deck A380s in 2010 whilst the A350s will arrive in 2012. A host of other new domestic carriers have also placed substantial orders with various manufacturers with most deliveries slated for late 2005 and spilling over into 2006. At present, existing private domestic carriers as well as the new startups have a total of 337 aircraft on order, mostly Boeing and Airbus variants and some ATR and Embraer aircraft. Not to be left behind, the national carriers have also planned substantial acquisitions. Air India has finalised a revised fleet plan through which its fleet size would be enhanced from the present level of 34 aircraft to 74 aircraft by the year 2012-13. This entails purchase of 50 aircraft from Boeing (8 Boeing 777-200LR, 15 Boeing 777-300ER and 27 Boeing 787s) at a projected cost of Rs 30000 crore (US$ 7 billion). Acquisition of 43 aircraft (19 Airbus A319, 4 Airbus A320 and 20 Airbus A321) along with related spares, spare engines, equipment, etc has since been approved for Indian Airlines at a total cost of Rs 9700 crore (US$2.2 billion).
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