The airline is in negotiation with Boeing and has reached out to the government to recertify the aircraft which has been grounded since 2018 after two crashes killing 349 persons, according to sources in the know.
“The company in its discussion with regulators has said it has made significant progress in negotiations with Boeing to acquire the 737 Max and intends to start operation by early 2022. For that purpose, the government needs to recertify the aircraft,” said a person aware of the development.
While most of the European countries and USA have approved the return of the jet, Indian regulators haven’t removed the ban so far.
Each 737 Max jet carries a list price of roughly $100 million, though such jets usually sell for less than half of their official value with typical market discounts.
Jhunjhunwala, in a television interview, had said the airline was looking to have 70 aircraft within the first five years of its operation. A narrowbody aircraft with dense seating of more than 185 seats is important to have a low-cost structure.
A person involved with Akasa’s planning said the airline intended to place bulk aircraft orders and scale up to at least 20 aircraft in the first year of operation.
“Market leadership gives pricing power to control fares which are suitable to the market leader and damaging to a new operator. This is an accepted practice across the world and IndiGo will follow it since it has the cash and capacity. Hence, scaling up has to be really fast,” the person said.
According to industry sources, Akasa would be able to get a sweeter deal from Boeing considering the manufacturer is desperate to find a buyer in one of the fastest growing markets of the world. After the shutdown of Jet Airways, Boeing has considerably lost ground to its rival—Airbus--in India. Only SpiceJet has 205 Boeing aircraft on order.
All other Indian airlines including market leader IndiGo, Vistara, AirAsia India and Go First use the A320 aircraft of Airbus. A320 competes with 737 Max.
A cheaper deal from Boeing may not be the only thing going in Akasa’s favour. An available pool of crew and engineers would be another plus as many of them were left jobless after Jet’s closure. Also the fact that SpiceJet has cut salaries and put a large number of crew on leave without pay would benefit Akasa, according to industry watchers.
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