HomeNewsBusinessExplained | Why is Air India not using its four Boeing 747s for rescue operations from Ukraine

Explained | Why is Air India not using its four Boeing 747s for rescue operations from Ukraine

Air India has historically used its four Boeing 747 planes—named Agra, Ajanta, Khajuraho, and Velha Goa—both while evacuating students from Wuhan in 2020 at the start of the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic and in Operation Desert Strom in 1990. The four jets are each over 25 years old and haven’t been operational since February 1, 2020.

March 02, 2022 / 20:31 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Air India flight. (Image Source: Shutterstock)
Air India flight. (Image Source: Shutterstock)

The Indian government has planned to operate as many as 31 evacuation flights until March 8 to evacuate thousands of Indians stranded in crisis-hit Ukraine.

Air India, Air India Express, IndiGo, SpiceJet, and the Indian Air Force will operate flights under Operation Ganga to bring back the around 20,000 students who are enrolled with various colleges in Ukraine.

Story continues below Advertisement

Just about 1,400 Indians have been flown back to India in the first six evacuation flights from Ukraine that were operated over the last five days. The evacuation process has been slow as Air India has been using smaller-capacity aircrafts such as the Boeing 787 Dreamliner instead of large-capacity, long-haul Boeing 747.

A Boeing 747 can seat up to 600 passengers, while the Boeing 787 Dreamliner, which have been used by Air India for the flights that have been operated till now, have a capacity of 330 passengers.