Air India to cut 22% domestic flights amid high fuel prices
Air India operates around 4,400 weekly flights, including 3,600 domestic and 800 international services.
PTI
-
The group owns a 25.1 per cent stake in Air India, and the remaining shareholding is with Tatas (PTI)
New Delhi, 27 May
Air India has temporarily cut 22 per cent of its domestic flights as the loss-making airline grapples with the impact of the high fuel prices, according to sources.
The
decision comes two weeks after the Tata Group-owned airline announced a 27 per
cent reduction in international flights amid airspace curbs, as well as
costlier jet fuel, which have pushed the operational costs higher for overseas
sectors.
Air India
operates around 4,400 weekly flights. Out of them, about 3,600 are domestic,
and 800 are international services.
"In
continuation of our previously announced adjustments to select international
services between June and August 2026, we have temporarily rationalised
operations on certain domestic routes during the same period, with a reduction
in frequencies on select routes," Air India said in a statement on
Wednesday.
The
sources said 20-22 per cent of the domestic flights would be reduced.
Based on
around 3,600 weekly domestic flights, the 22 per cent cut would result in a
reduction of more than 790 weekly services.
The
airline said these adjustments are driven by the sustained impact of high fuel
prices on overall operations.
"Air India will continue to monitor demand and operating conditions closely, with a
view to restoring frequencies as conditions stabilise," it said in the
statement.
The
carrier also said that passengers impacted by these changes will be proactively
assisted with re-accommodation on alternative flights, complimentary date
changes, or full refunds, as applicable.
On 13 May,
Air India announced reducing international flights during the June-August
period.
The
airline would cut nearly 100 overseas flights and temporarily suspend services
on seven routes, including Delhi-Chicago, which will result in up to a 27 per
cent reduction in its international capacity.
The
carrier will be temporarily suspending services on Delhi-Chicago, Delhi-Newark,
Mumbai-New York, Delhi-Shanghai, Chennai-Singapore, Mumbai-Dhaka, and
Delhi-Male routes till August.
While
announcing the rationalisation of services, Air India, on May 13, also said it
"may make further adjustments to its network, should the extraordinary
operating environment prevail".
Air
India's loss stood at more than SGD 3.56 billion (over Rs 26,700 crore) in the
financial year ended March 2026, as per the figures disclosed by Singapore
Airlines Group in its annual financial report for 2025-2 that was released on
May 14.
Singapore
Airlines Group's net profit dropped 57 per cent to SGD 1.184 billion (nearly Rs
8,900 crore) in the fiscal year ended March 2026, mainly due to the absence of
a prior-year one-off accounting gain related to the Vistara merger, and Air
India losses.
The group owns a 25.1 per cent stake in Air India, and the remaining shareholding is with Tatas.
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