Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Air India plans to bring all 17 grounded aircraft back into operation

AIR INDIA is planning to bring all of its 17 aircraft, which have been grounded for a "prolonged" period, back into operation by October-end, its chief Ashwani Lohani has said.

These 17 aircraft have been grounded for time periods ranging from four months to one year due to lack of funds for their repair and maintenance.


"We plan to retrieve all 17 prolonged grounded aircraft by the end of October," Air India Chairman and Managing Director (CMD) Ashwani Lohani told PTI on Monday (22).

According to the plan, eight of the 17 aircraft would be put back into operation by the end of August itself. These eight aircraft include four from A320 family, one B747, one B777 and two B787s.

Remaining nine aircraft all of them belonging to A320 family would be retrieved by the end of the October if the national carrier receives the funds for maintenance in time.

"We are aiming for revenue maximisation. Therefore, we plan to put the retrieved aircraft back into operation as soon as possible," Lohani said.

Air India plans to use these aircraft on the new routes where it will start flying soon, he added.

Over the past few weeks, Indian Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri has announced a number of new international flights that would be started by the national carrier.

The minister announced last month Air India would start flights on Mumbai-Nairobi route and Delhi-Chennai-Bali route from September 27 and October 27, respectively.

On July 3, Puri told the Rajya Sabha (upper house) that the government is committed to the disinvestment of Air India and the plan is to make it more operationally viable before stake sale.

In 2018-19, Air India had made losses of around Rs 76 billion. By the end of 2018-19, it had a debt burden of around Rs 583bn.

More For You

billboards

The company is on course to install the screens in 1,000 buildings by the end of this year

30secondsgroup

Camera billboards track residents' reaction to adverts in UK apartment blocks

Highlights

  • 30Seconds Group plans to install camera-equipped billboards in 1,000 buildings by end of 2025.
  • RMG has installed screens in 126 developments housing 50,000 people.
  • Civil liberties group Big Brother Watch calls the technology "creepy as hell".

Digital billboards fitted with cameras to monitor residents' responses to advertisements have been installed in hundreds of apartment blocks across the UK, prompting privacy concerns from civil liberties campaigners and residents.

The supplier, 30Seconds Group, has installed the electronic noticeboards all equipped with cameras in communal areas, telling potential advertisers the devices can track "occupant engagement" from residents who form a "captive audience" while waiting for lifts.

Keep ReadingShow less