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India’s Jet Airways grounds ten more planes

INDIA'S beleaguered Jet Airways said today (11) that it had grounded 10 more planes over unpaid dues to leasing companies and had cancelled all west-bound long haul flights out of the country for the day.

The airline had already grounded more than two thirds of its fleet and Thursday's (11) action suggests its operational fleet size may now be less than 20 planes, the minimum required under Indian regulations to be able to fly overseas.


A company spokesman said Jet Airways had proactively cancelled all west-bound long haul flights from India from Thursday (11) until Friday (12) morning. He would not say whether Jet's operational fleet was now less than 20, only that it was in the double digits.

Saddled with more than $1.2 billion of bank debt, Jet is fighting for survival as it also owes money to lessors, suppliers, pilots and oil companies.

It has had to ground most of its fleet, while oil companies are tightening fuel supply terms despite efforts by the airline's lenders to find a new investor to bail out the cash-strapped carrier.

Lenders, led by State Bank of India (SBI), want a new investor to take a stake of up to 75 per cent in the airline. Initial bids were to be submitted by the end of Wednesday (10), but SBI extended the deadline on Wednesday to Friday (12).

The airline has been forced in recent months to cancel hundreds of flights to several destinations in India and overseas.

(Reuters)

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London tourist levy

The capital recorded 89 m overnight stays in 2024

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London to introduce tourist levy that could raise £240 million a year

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Highlights

  • Government expected to give London powers to bring in a tourist levy on overnight stays.
  • GLA study says a £1 fee could raise £91m, a 5 per cent charge could generate £240m annually.
  • Research suggests London would not see a major fall in visitor numbers if levy introduced.
The mayor of London has welcomed reports that he will soon be allowed to introduce a tourist levy on overnight visitors, with new analysis outlining how a charge could work in the capital.
Early estimates suggest a London levy could raise as much as £240 m every year. The capital recorded 89 m overnight stays in 2024.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is expected to give Sadiq Khan and other English city leaders the power to impose such a levy through the upcoming English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill. London currently cannot set its own tourist tax, making England the only G7 nation where national government blocks local authorities from doing so.

A spokesperson for the mayor said City Hall supported the idea in principle, adding “The Mayor has been clear that a modest tourist levy, similar to other international cities, would boost our economy, deliver growth and help cement London’s reputation as a global tourism and business destination.”

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