Currently working towards its launch, POP
(people over profit) plans
to be the first airline to operate non-stop flights between the UK
and both Amritsar and Ahmedabad in India’s Punjab and Gujarat
states.
India recently called for “a robust
supra-national supply chain” and announced a list of proposed air
cargo reforms, including 24-hour customs processing with paperless
systems, the promotion of free trade and warehousing zones and the
implementation of air freight stations as well as incentives for
the logistics industry such as the granting of ‘infrastructure
status’ for companies co-located at airports.
Launching its operations against this
trade-friendly background, POP will be providing previously
unavailable opportunities to manufacturers and producers in
northern India who will now be able to take advantage of direct
8-hour flights to the UK to export a range of goods and produce -
fruit and vegetables (including papayas and mangoes), sugar cane,
tea from the northern plantations and chicken - as well as
manufactured goods, including textiles and traditional Indian
clothing.
Looking to the future, Ahmedabad, known mostly
for its manufacturing of denim fabric and its export of jewellery
and gemstones, also produces chemicals, cars and pharmaceuticals
and has recently established itself as a biotech hub, with more
than 50 biotechnology companies and approximately 66 biotech
support organisations.
POP’s air cargo services will also help
manufacturers in other countries wanting to export to India. The
airline’s direct flights to Punjab and Gujarat will enable them to
meet, at a significantly lower cost, the growing demand for
products such as electronic devices from an expanding middle class
in all parts of India, including the north of the country.
To further facilitate trade between India and the rest of
the world, including online business, POP will also be negotiating
wholesale deals with selected international courier companies.
(Nino) Navdip Singh Judge, Chairman & Principal and
founding partner of POP, said, “The vision behind POP is one
of making a genuine and positive difference to the communities we
plan to serve. We aim to do that by opening up new routes between
the UK and India, by operating on a ‘caring capitalism’ model,
donating at least 51% of our net profits to charitable causes, and
by providing new opportunities for growing businesses in Punjab
and Gujarat to engage in worldwide trade in a way that has
previously been impossible for them. The recent talks between the
UK and Indian governments about a possible preferential or free
trade agreement following the Brexit decision makes us even more
confident about the cargo opportunities that POP can look forward
to”
See other recent
news regarding:
POP,
India,
Freight,
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