Low-cost carrier (LCC) SpiceJet plans to set up five more regional hubs in an effort to connect all major towns through its 70-seater Bombardier aircraft.
He said SpiceJet wanted Mumbai to be one of its hubs, but had to shift to Ahmedabad because of constraints at the airport. The Hyderabad base connects Aurangabad, Bhopal, Indore, Mangalore, Rajahmundry, Tirupati and Vijayawada.
| SPREADING WINGS |
| * To have five more hubs in Chennai, Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Kolkata and Delhi |
| * Each hub to have five aircraft each |
| * Chennai and Ahmedabad to be next two hubs |
| * Of 30 planes on order, 15 will come by July next year |
| * Also plan to add five Boeing 737s by May next year increasing it to 35 |
| * SpiceJet is the fifth largest carrier in terms of passenger carriage with 13.4 per cent market share in August |
“There is more opportunity in the south and west. We will soon launch our operations in Chennai and Ahmedabad. Decisions about the launch of other bases have not been taken yet,” said the official.
The airline has ordered 30 planes from Bombardier — 15 fixed and 15 others on options. It will receive the first 15 planes by July. “A decision to confirm the order on options will be taken by March,” said the official.
It has added nine planes in the last nine months and plans to add five more Boeing 737s by May to increase its fleet size to 35.
With the second phase of growth in aviation expected to come from tier-II and -III cities, almost all airlines are looking to connect smaller cities for expansion. Jet Airways plans to increase connectivity between smaller cities where there is demand but no connectivity.
Air India is also servicing cities like Gwalior and Kanpur. It recently announced it would directly connect Port Blair and Delhi.
With Kingfisher announcing to discontinue its low-cost operations, a lot of opportunities have been created in this space. According to the Directorate General of Civil Aviation data for August, Kingfisher Red flew around 10 per cent of the 4.8 million domestic passengers.
Jet Airways flew 26.3 per cent of the passengers, followed by Kingfisher (18.8 per cent), IndiGo (18.7 per cent) and SpiceJet (13.4 per cent).
SpiceJet reported a net loss of Rs 71.9 crore for the first quarter because of high oil prices. It had closed the previous corresponding period with a net profit of Rs 55.2 crore. Its stocks were down 1.88 per cent at Rs 20.85 on the Bombay Stock Exchange.
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