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India removes domestic airfare cap to relieve airlines

According to a government order, India will remove the temporary fare cap it imposed on domestic tickets in December. This is a measure to help airlines who are facing increased costs due to disruptions caused by the Iran War.

The caps are set to be lifted on Monday. They were introduced last December in response to IndiGo's mass cancellations of flights, which led to an increase in airfares at other airlines.

The Indian Civil Aviation Ministry stated in an order that "the current situation has stabilised with the restoration of capacity and the normalisation?of operations throughout the sector."

The order was not made public. It was dated Friday and reviewed on Saturday. The ministry's spokesperson did not reply to our request for comment.

Indian airlines have urged the government not to raise the price caps. They claim that the current restrictions are causing "huge revenue losses" and higher operating costs, in part due to a rise in jet fuel prices caused by the war.

HSBC analysts say that a change of $1 per barrel in fuel prices can affect 'IndiGo’s' full-year fuel bill by approximately 3 billion rupees.

A one-way ticket for a trip up to 500 km cannot exceed 7,500 rupees (80.07 dollars). The cap for journeys between 1,000-1,500 km (such as New Delhi to Mumbai) was capped at 15,000 rupees.

The order from the government instructs airlines to make sure that fares are "reasonable and transparent" in accordance with market conditions. It also ensures passenger interests will not be adversely affected.

(source: Reuters)