Government officials said the airline might record an operating profit of about Rs 1,000 crore in FY16.
At a meeting with junior ministers on Tuesday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had sought a road map for the revival of the airline, sources said. In the last week of February, he had written to Air India, asking why the national airline wasn’t able to post profits and whether the carrier needed government assistance to break even.
The letter also enquired about the market share of the airline and raised concern over why Air India was losing ground to its private peers. Sharma said in its reply to the Prime Minister’s Office, the airline management had sought the government’s financial support to break even in the next three years.
Though the earnings for 2014-15 haven’t been announced yet, it is expected Air India will incur an operational loss for that period.
For 2013-14, it had registered an operational loss of Rs 2,123 crore, against a loss of Rs 3,807 in 2012-13 and Rs 5,140 in 2011-12.
Of this, Rs 18,400 crore has already been pumped in. The government, however, has been trimming budgetary support to the airline and pushing it to break even.
Last week, Air India had said it might post an operating profit in 2015-16 due to “an improvement in operating performance and a reduction in fuel costs”.
An Air India spokesperson said return to profitability and on-time performance would be the drivers of the airline’s operations in 2015-16.
The airline expects seat occupancy of 77.7 per cent on domestic routes and 73 per cent on international flights, passenger revenue of Rs 17,000 crore and overall revenue of Rs 21,500 crore in 2015-16.
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