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Leaner winter schedule could mean profitability for airlines

There will be 13 percent fewer fights this winter compared to the summer schedule. While that may be bad news for passengers if fares go up, the lower cash burn will mean higher yields for airlines

October 28, 2022 / 10:48 IST
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A drop in capacity could drive up airfares on some routes if not all. The other fallout is that of losing connectivity to certain stations (Representative Image)

Seasonality in air travel has been an eternal challenge for the industry, which has to sit on costly assets. While Europe has a clear peak from June to August (with a month or two prior and after seeing considerable traffic), India has two peaks, making capacity planning a little more difficult. But as the “peakest” of seasons comes up, most Indian carriers are shrinking instead of growing, and this puts a post-Covid recovery in serious doubt.

Data shared by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) shows the regulator has approved 21,941 weekly flights across airlines, compared to 25,309 weekly flights in the summer schedule, a fall of 13.31 percent. Compared to the winter 2021 schedule, the fall is 1.5 percent. It has been a year since capacity caps were removed and two months since fare caps were removed, but passenger numbers are yet to touch pre-Covid levels.

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In all, airlines have approvals for 3,134 daily flights, a number that is unlikely to be achieved going by past trends. The highest number of departures per day since the restart post-lockdown has been 2,882.

Major drop sequentially

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