Essayer OR - Gratuit

Flying on the razor's edge in 2020

Cruising Heights

|

January 2020

The year that has gone by – 2019 – was possibly the worst year for Indian aviation. Not only did it see the demise of Jet Airways but there was red ink on the balance sheets of domestic carriers. November 2019 brought relief to the industry as double-digit growth came back. Will that trend continue, asks AMEYA JOSHI?

Flying on the razor's edge in 2020

In April 2019, India recorded a slump in air traffic for the first time after mid-2013. The month-over-month traffic in domestic skies declined by 4.5 per cent. For a market that was used to growing at 20 per cent, this was a setback. April was the month when Jet Airways suspended operations. Against this backdrop, the aviation industry was elated to hear that November 2019 saw a double-digit growth in air traffic in India.

The year has been characterized by one bad news after another. From the grounding of B737 MAX, the demise of Jet Airways, the issues with Pratt & Whitney engines with the A320neo family and the heavy losses by airlines — the year has been especially bad for the industry in India.

The impact of the collapse of Jet Airways was particularly strong. While the airline had scaled down its operations in phases over the last few years and concentrated on its Mumbai, Delhi and Bengaluru hub – it still had sizable operations and stations where IndiGo was yet to venture or had operations at such stations where it was in duopoly. These stations – the airports of Bhuj, Bhavnagar, Rajkot and those in the North East – took a huge hit and are yet to recover.

Why did the traffic slow down?

Over the last five years, air traffic has been growing rapidly. However, this growth has come at the back of equivalent capacity induction in the market. All airlines put together and led by IndiGo were growing capacity by Available Seat Kilometers (ASKs) by a little over 20 per cent on average.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Cruising Heights

Cruising Heights

Cruising Heights

FROM 'FAIR SKIES' TO 'FAVOURABLE SKIES'?

The story of airline disruption refunds in the US reveals a dramatic policy reversal and a tug-of-war between passenger advocates and industry lobbyists.

time to read

1 min

September 2025

Cruising Heights

Cruising Heights

Entertained at Thirty Thousand Feet

Live in-flight TV: Despite challenges, the streaming battle is on

time to read

11 mins

September 2025

Cruising Heights

Cruising Heights

Blockchain in Air Cargo - Beyond the Buzzword

Blockchain is making serious waves in the air cargo industry as the ultimate trust-building tool in a world that thrives on speed, precision, and global coordination.

time to read

9 mins

September 2025

Cruising Heights

Cruising Heights

Executive Efficiency

New-generation business jets are flying faster and further than ever before. ATUL CHANDRA outlines the developments

time to read

6 mins

September 2025

Cruising Heights

Cruising Heights

HEATHROW'S GAMBIT FOR A £49BN RUNWAY TO THE FUTURE

Heathrow has submitted its planning application for a third runway.

time to read

2 mins

September 2025

Cruising Heights

Cruising Heights

INDIGO AT 19

Almost two decades ago, IndiGo took off with a modest promise of punctual flights, no-frills service, and fares low enough to bring millions into the skies.

time to read

24 mins

September 2025

Cruising Heights

Cruising Heights

A Duty-free adventure

With passenger numbers soaring in India, the airport retail sector is deploying AI- driven personalisation, immersive experiences, and strategic layouts to captivate a new generation of travellers.

time to read

12 mins

September 2025

Cruising Heights

Cruising Heights

Why Hybrid Propulsion Matters for India

Hybrid engines are a vital step forward from conventional jet engine technology to future propulsion technologies for aviation.

time to read

6 mins

September 2025

Cruising Heights

Cruising Heights

PITCHING FOR Global Equity

As Air India and IndiGo struggle to expand globally, New Delhi has taken up the case of slot allocation at major European hubs with ICAO. The outcome could well set the norms, giving developing-nation carriers a level playing field.

time to read

10 mins

September 2025

Cruising Heights

Cruising Heights

Wings Level

Despite trade tensions in various parts of the world, OEMs are continuing to rack up aircraft order, reports,

time to read

10 mins

September 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size