For now, demand for regional travel outstrips supply, making the sector attractive for airlines. Air travel penetration in India remains small in global terms, with 0.04 annual trips per capita against 0.3 in China and more than two in the US. Photo: HT
New Delhi: The airport in Patna, one of India’s smaller cities and the capital of its poorest state, is so crowded that government authorities this year said they need to build another one.
“We are close to capacity in our arrivals and departure lounges,” said Santosh Kumar, who runs operations at Patna airport. “We can handle more planes but it is only possible with a bigger terminal. We need a bigger airport.”
Higher disposable incomes, an expanding middle class and rapid urbanisation have made India one of the world’s fastest growing domestic aviation markets, where passenger numbers are expected to grow by more than 75% in the next six years to exceed 217 million.
Much of that growth is expected to come from smaller cities like Patna, where more people are flying for the first time. Passenger numbers from these places have risen nearly 17% a year since 2009, compared with 7.6% from larger hubs, data from industry analysts CAPA-Centre for Aviation show.
“The opportunity is changing,” said Aditya Ghosh, president of IndiGo, which now flies larger Airbus A320 planes to and from Patna instead of smaller ATR jets. “On some of these smaller routes, the planes are more full than the trunk routes.”
Fifth largest carrier GoAir has also boosted flights to and from Patna and other smaller cities, chief executive Giorgio de Roni said, as these regional routes now make more money than the more congested routes between Mumbai and Delhi.
While more established carriers see regional travel as a way to counter the razor-thin margins and losses on big city routes, a crop of new airlines are catering only to regional demand.
Zav Airways plans to start flying within the northeast in 2015, when Air Carnival also aims to fly within the south, according to CAPA.
Chief financial officer Vivek Choudhary said Air Costa was bracing for competition. “But we are capitalizing on the first-mover advantage,” he added.
For now, demand for regional travel outstrips supply, making the sector attractive for airlines. Air travel penetration in India remains small in global terms, with 0.04 annual trips per capita against 0.3 in China and more than two in the US.
Industry analysts, however, warn that as more carriers pile into the sector, fares will fall and airlines will face the same pressure on yields as they do now on big city routes.
“There is huge latent demand in some of these smaller cities,” said Dhiraj Mathur, an executive director at PwC India who focuses on aerospace and defence. “But there’s always a danger from increased competition.” Reuters
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