Venkatesha Babu , Isha Rautela
10 Dec 2022
The four-month-old airline looks to induct one or two planes every month
Akasa is a financially stable airline that can afford to add 72 planes to its fleet over the next five years, said Vinay Dube (centre), CEO of the airline.
The country's newest airline, Akasa Air, which started operating in August this year, is sufficiently capitalised and has the financial resources to induct 72 aircraft by 2027, Praveen Iyer, Co-founder, and chief commercial officer,told businessline. Currently, it runs nine planes and about 56 flights daily.
"As a start-up, it's been exactly four months, and we are happy with the overall performance. In fact, the financial platform is strong enough to allow Akasa Air to place an aircraft order in the next 18 months that will be significantly larger than the first one." said Iyer.
Moreover, the aircraft deliveries have been timely, and the company is on track to induct one or two aircraft every month as per its plan, explained the CCO.
"By December 25, we will have 10 aircraft and also take delivery of the 11th aircraft. By December end, we will have 11 destinations on 16 non-stop routes and expect to cross the milestone of 500 weekly flights."
CORPORATE TIE-UPS
Akasa intends to expand its network to establish a pan-India presence, focusing on the metro to tier-2 and 3 route connectivity. "Our fleet size will be 18 aircraft by the end of March 2023, and over the next four years, we will add 54 additional aircraft, taking our total fleet size to 72 aircraft," said the CCO.
The airline has also tied up with 50-60 companies over the last few months. "We were not aiming for high corporate penetration, given that we had just started. However, we have had significant success with corporate programmes.
The feedback has prompted to address the demand from the corporate segment," he added.
India is a vast market, and the middle and higher-in-come groups are growing at a fast pace.
The country has room for another three to four players in the aviation industry over the next five years, said Iyer.
"In 2019, air traffic was about 200 million passengers per year. Based on our internal analysis, by 2030, it is estimated to go up by about 500 million passengers annually.
Hence, there is enough room for every player in the market to grow along with the market. In this growing pie, we do not have to worry about taking any other player's market share as the market is large enough for many carriers to participate." said the CCO.
Akasa Air is operating 8 aircraft with a seating capacity of 189 seats and one aircraft with 174 seats. Currently, it employs 1,300 people.