From low-cost carriers to full-service providers, how Indian airlines define their seat pricing strategies
Air India Express said it has a fleet of 58 aircraft comprising 28 Boeing 737s and 28 Airbus A320s
Overall domestic demand remained high, with four out of six major carriers reporting load factors of over 90 per cent in September
AirAsia India operates only domestic flights while 95 per cent of Air India Express's flights are between India and the Gulf region
First phase focused on addressing legacy issues, strengthening fleet, upgrading systems and hiring
Air India Express and AirAsia India have moved to a unified reservation system, whereby passengers can make bookings for both airlines through an integrated website. The move is part of the ongoing process of merging AirAsia India with Air India Express. The combined entity will focus on leisure-oriented and price-sensitive markets. On March 27, the two airlines moved to a single, unified reservations system and website, and adopted common social media and customer support channels. This migration, which largely involved Air India Express migrating to the systems used by AirAsia India, confers significant capability and efficiency benefits for the airline and passengers, a release said on Tuesday. The development comes five months after AirAsia India was fully acquired by Air India, and three months after both AirAsia India and Air India Express were placed under a single CEO. "Passengers are now able to make and manage bookings, and check-in to AirAsia India and Air India Express
Pilots were traditionally required to update their pilot logbook in physical logbooks, as required by the MOCA's Aircraft Rule, 1937 (67A)
Under this "streamlining" plan, Air India is likely to completely exit from five routes and AirAsia India might stop operating services on four other routes, sources said
The airline is alleged to have violated the norms pertaining to Pilot Proficiency Check and Instrument Rating tests (PPC/IR) and could face a financial penalty of up to Rs 1 crore
Other top performers were Hyderabad's Rajiv Gandhi International Airport, Chennai's Chennai Airport and Kolkata's Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose Airport
Leaves after three years of service in second stint; Vinay Malhotra, head of IndiGo's Global Sales, will take over from him
Combined entity will become India's largest international and second largest domestic carrier
The expected merger is set to happen within a month of the Tata group completing the consolidation of Air India Express and AirAsia India
Air India on Wednesday said an operational review process is underway to integrate budget carrier AirAsia India with Air India Express and the merger is likely by the end of 2023. Tata group-owned Air India has also signed agreements to have a 100 per cent stake in AirAsia India. The carrier is a joint venture between Tata Sons and Air Asia Investment Ltd. Tata Sons has an 83.67 per cent stake and the remaining 16.33 per cent shareholding is with AirAsia. The merger, likely by the end of 2023, is aimed at having a single low-cost carrier for the Air India group. Post-merger, the entity will be branded as Air India Express, according to a statement. AirAsia India was launched in 2014 while Air India Express started operations back in 2005. The consolidation of the two low-cost carriers -- AirAsia India and Air India Express -- will be undertaken as part of the restructuring roadmap that is being envisioned for the Tata group's airline business, Air India said in a statement. "The .
Malaysian carrier's India foray ends after eight years; Tatas are working to merge AirAsia India with low-cost service Air India Express
'Air India already has scale... we are not doing this from scratch. We are doing this from a running start', said Wilson
Bhaskaran - a Tata Group veteran -- joined AirAsia India as its CEO and MD on November 15, 2018
SIA, however, has cautioned its investors that there is no certainty of a deal
The Tata Group is yet to take a decision on its merger with Air India. Both Vistara and Air India are full-service carriers
The Tata Group has started an exercise to evaluate options to consolidate AirAsia India and Vistara under Air India to bring operational synergies among the three airlines under its umbrella, sources said. Air India, which the group had taken control of in January after winning the bid to acquire the national carrier for Rs 18,000 crore in October last year, has set up a team under its Director of Operations, R S Sandhu, sources familiar with the development said. The team will evaluate synergies in operations between Air India Express and AirAsia India as well as between Air India and Vistara, they said. "Air India CEO and MD Campbell Wilson has set up this team, which will look into synergy between Air India Express and AirAsia India and also between Air India and Vistara and how to achieve the merger," a source said. The team has been asked to submit its plan within one year, the source added. It is understood that the plan is to achieve consolidation of AirAsia India into Air