Friday, November 22, 2024

Air India no longer has preferential access for international flights

“The central government may at its discretion grant or deny allocation of traffic rights to any air transport undertaking having regard to its preparedness to undertake such operations, viability of the operations on a particular route, overall interests of the civil aviation sector etc.”

— DGCA Fresh Circular

PRAVASISAMWAD.COM

Since the takeover of Air India by the Tata Group, the national carrier has lost its preferential access to bilateral rights that are needed to operate flights to another country, according to a circular issued by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), PTI reported.

Bilateral rights were granted under the air services agreements signed between two countries since Air India was a government-owned national carrier. For airlines of any country to operate international flights to another country, the two sides have to negotiate and sign a “’bilateral air services agreement”, that decides how many flights (or seats) per week can be allowed to fly from one country to the other. When the agreement is signed, each country is free to allocate the bilateral rights to its respective airlines.

According to previous DGCA circular, “due consideration shall be given to the operational plans submitted by Air India Limited before allocation of the traffic rights to the other eligible applicants.”

Even after the flying rights are allocated to an airline, it must have slots at both the airports in order to start flight operations. A slot is a date and time at which an airline’s aircraft is permitted to depart or arrive at an airport. The slots are allocated by a committee that comprises the civil aviation ministry and DGCA officials, airport operators and airlines, among others.

Clause 3.6 of a previous DGCA circular stated that “due consideration shall be given to the operational plans submitted by Air India Limited before allocation of the traffic rights to the other eligible applicants”. In the middle of April this year, the DGCA issued a fresh circular removed the clause.

According to the fresh circular, “The central government may at its discretion grant or deny allocation of traffic rights to any air transport undertaking having regard to its preparedness to undertake such operations, viability of the operations on a particular route, overall interests of the civil aviation sector etc.”

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Suhani Singh
Suhani Singh
Suhani Singh is a travel and hospitality professional. Her areas of interest are business development and travel advisory.

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