IATA has called on the government of India to
maximize the potential contribution of aviation to India’s
development by addressing infrastructure constraints that limit
growth and government policies that impose excessive costs on
aviation.
Growth forecasts for India indicate a trebling
of passenger demand by 2037 when some 500 million people are
expected to fly to, from or within India. Already aviation
supports 7.5 million Indian jobs and 30 billion Rupees of GDP
(1.5% of the economy).
Global connectivity that only aviation can
provide is a critical driver of all modern economies. The
financial struggles of India’s airline industry put the stable
development of connectivity at risk. And India’s carriers are
suffering a "double-whammy" of steeply rising fuel costs and the
decline in the value of the Indian Rupee. The rise in fuel costs
is particularly acute for Indian carriers for which fuel makes-up
34% of operating costs—well above the global average of 24%.
"While it is easy to find Indian passengers who
want to fly, it’s very difficult for airlines to make money in
this market. India’s social and economic development needs
airlines to be able to profitably accommodate growing demand. We
must address infrastructure constraints that limit growth and
government policies that deviate from global standards and drive
up the cost of connectivity," said Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s
Director General and CEO.
De Juniac’s remarks came in an opening address
to the International Aviation Summit in Delhi, co-hosted by the
Indian Ministry of Civil Aviation (MoCA), the Airports Authority
India (AAI) and IATA. The joint Summit commemorates the
approaching milestone of 50-straight months of double digit
domestic growth for Indian aviation.
Infrastructure
India’s aviation infrastructure has benefitted
from significant upgrades in recent years. "It is clear that India
has the capacity to develop effective infrastructure. But the job
is not done. Passenger numbers will grow. And infrastructure must
not be a bottleneck in fulfilling the needs of travelers and the
economy," said de Juniac who called for work in four priority
areas:
* Develop a comprehensive and strategic
masterplan for India’s airports. "The infrastructure issue is
critical for India’s future. Band-Aid solutions will not do the
job," said de Juniac.
* Remove all obstacles to successfully open Navi
Mumbai as quickly as possible. Urgent relief is needed for
Mumbai’s severe capacity bottleneck.
* Modernize airport processes using technology
in line with global standards. The DigiYatra initiative will make
a significant step in the right direction with digitally connected
airports, passengers, systems and flights. In line with this, IATA
encouraged the Indian government to support the broad
implementation of IATA’s One ID initiative which uses biometric
identification (similar to India’s Aadhar identity card) to save
time by eliminating the need for repeated document checks in
airports.
* Flexibly use military airspace to expand
airspace capacity for civil operations . This was successfully
demonstrated with the opening of a conditional airway through
restricted airspace over Bhuj and should now be expanded to more
areas.
IATA also noted its concerns on government
proposals for concession contracts at newly developed greenfield
airports.
"We believe that it makes no sense to fix a per
passenger yield at the outset of a concession contract that is set
to run for four decades. Flexible parameters should be set that
are regularly reviewed by a regulator. And we know from bitter
experiences in Brazil, Australia and elsewhere that selecting the
company that simply proposes the highest concession fee does not
yield good long-term results," said de Juniac.
Regulation
IATA also encouraged the government to look at
ways to improve India’s competitiveness by aligning with global
standards and reducing excessive government imposed costs.
* Zero-rate GST for international travel in line
with ICAO principles and international obligations.
* Create a more competitive market for jet fuel
by:
* Adding domestic uplift of domestic jet fuel to
the GST framework with full input tax credit allowed * Removing
fuel throughput fees in line with global best practice *
Creating competition with common-use open-access infrastructure,
and * Regulating transparency in pricing of jet fuel *
Reducing excise duty on fuel
"There are many priorities in fostering the
economic and social development of India. Fundamental issues of
eradicating poverty, ensuring quality education, providing health
care and safe drinking water are massively important agenda items.
Creating a better environment for aviation to do business can and
will progress the nuts and bolts of India’s development day to
day. Safe, secure and sustainable air links make our world a
better place. That is why I call aviation the business of freedom.
And the government and industry share a privileged responsibility
to work together for its success," said de Juniac.
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