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India's aviation boom creates new opportunities for airline players

India's aviation safety chief said that the country will need more government oversight, as it's airlines are taking delivery of thousands planes and the market is growing rapidly.

In an interview conducted on the sidelines the U.N. Aviation Agency's triennial meeting in Montreal, the director general of civil aircraft, Faiz Ahmad Kidwai, said that India was looking for "more responsibility, greater safety oversight and more manpower" as the number of commercial planes has nearly doubled in the past decade. Another 2,000 aircraft are on order.

India's aviation market is growing at a rapid pace, but the crash of Air India Flight 214 in June has increased scrutiny on safety standards.

India is also facing pilot shortages, and a recent parliamentary report warned that the lack of staff at the regulator for air safety could jeopardize safety. The regulator reported that it had found 263 safety lapses in the country's airline industry.

Travel demand has created new opportunities for airlines. IndiGo and Air India dominate the aviation market in India.

Kidwai stated that the industry is growing and more airlines are needed.

Yes, if more carriers come to the area, then they will have an opportunity.

International Air Transport Association statistics show that 174 million Indian domestic passengers and 730 millions Chinese passengers will fly in 2024. However, this number is still far less than the 730,000,000 passengers in China.

India's rapid growth as an aviation hub has been overshadowed by the Air India crash of June. The plane crash, which killed 260 people, was the worst aviation accident in a decade.

The Indian government released a preliminary report on the investigation. It showed confusion among the pilots in the cockpit just before the crash. This was after the fuel engine switches were switched from run to off almost simultaneously, shortly after takeoff.

The Supreme Court of India asked the government on Monday to respond to an appeal seeking an independent investigation in the crash. Kidwai stated that the investigation is still under the jurisdiction of India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau in accordance with international protocol.

(source: Reuters)