The government is planning to put an end to the system of commercial agreements and royalties accruing to Air-India in a move that could severely dent the national carrier's profits. |
The ministries of civil aviation, tourism and external affairs are meeting tomorrow to chalk out a more liberal policy on bilateral royalties. |
The Prime Minister's Office had proposed that these fees be transferred to the Consolidated Fund of India. |
The civil aviation ministry is of the opinion that the system of receiving royalty is not present in any other country and India should follow the rest of the world. |
According to civil aviation ministry sources, in 2002-03 Air-India had a revenue of over Rs 300 crore from commercial agreements, bilateral royalties, block seat arrangements and the like, of which nearly Rs 200 crore came from commercial arrangements and royalties. Air-India's profits last year were Rs 133.85 crore. |
The earnings from royalties and other commercial arrangements were expected to go up to Rs 300 crore this year due to new agreements with countries, the sources added. |
They said the government planned to stop all commercial agreements in future bilateral negotiations and would also phase out the existing ones. |
Air-India has code-sharing agreements with over 12 airlines, including Aeroflot, Air France, Kuwait Airways, Air Mauritius and Malaysia Airlines. |
The civil aviation ministry last year decided to enter into more such pacts because they were profitable for Air-India. |
As far as royalty is concerned, Air-India charges $100-300 per seat from the airlines, including KLM and Virgin Atlantic, depending on the sector. |
Officials said the government planned to create a more liberal bilaterals policy, which would attract more airlines to the country. |
This is primarily to create hubs of the stature of Dubai and Singapore in Delhi and Mumbai now that the airport privatisation proposal has been passed by the Cabinet. |