| A plane ticket that costs less than half the regular fare. A plane ticket that costs less than the train fare to the same destination. |
| A plane ticket that costs Re 1. Even two years ago, if someone had offered these prices to you, chances are you'd have asked them what banned substance they were on. Today, they all exist. You can fly SpiceJet from Delhi to Mumbai for Rs 99 or Air Deccan from Delhi to Bangalore for Re 1. |
| But before you rush to buy your ticket, stop to consider for a moment: aviation turbine fuel is 2.5 times more expensive in India than anywhere else in the world. Navigation charges are 60 per cent higher than in other countries. And landing fees at Indian airports are 70 to 80 per cent higher than at airports round the globe. |
| Given that these costs are fixed and the same for all airlines that fly in Indian skies "" and account for close to 40 per cent of total costs "" how do low-cost carriers earn their name? |
| "Perhaps it would be more fair to call them low-fare carriers," muses Faisal Wahid, director, East West Airlines. His company was India's first private sector domestic airline (between 1992 and 1997), and is now working towards a relaunch later this year. |
| The new version of East West was to have been a low-cost carrier (LCC), but Wahid's now keeping his options open. "It's going to become a dirty business. There will be a shakeout among Indian LCCs," he says. |
| That's a thought echoed by Kapil Kaul, the Indian subcontinent and Middle East CEO of the Sydney-based think tank, Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation. "By 2010, there will be just three large LCCs in India, with another three or four smaller, regional players," he predicts. |
| The LCC business in India really began with the Bangalore-based Air Deccan, which launched in August 2003 with a Bangalore-Hyderabad flight. Now, there are already four LCCs in operation in the country and more than 10 others are finalising their flight paths. |
| That's more than all the LCCs operating in West Asia and Asia Pacific. Will there be business enough for all these players? More importantly, given the constraints of the Indian aviation industry, how are they going to keep their costs down? |
| High flyers The defining features of an LCC are also the main reasons why its costs are lower compared to the legacy, full service or "normal" airline. |
| Most LCCs offer short haul, point-to-point services on a no-frills basis; they have a single seat arrangement (all economy, no business or first class); and their fleet consists of a single aircraft model. |
| These, plus a few other factors, ensure that their costs are 35 to 40 per cent lower than those of legacy carriers. The stranglehold on costs and heavy passenger load also ensures that most LCCs break even by Year Two, latest by Year Three. |
Did we say "most"? SpiceJet started operations just two weeks ago but CEO Mark Winders is confident of breaking even within the next six months.
The UB group's Kingfisher Airlines, too, has been in the air for just over a month, but President and COO Alex Wilcox says the company will achieve operational break even by end-2005.
Those claims are still to be proven; meanwhile, there's Air Deccan. The airline claims a turnover of Rs 350 crore in 2004-05, having flown one million passengers.
This year, says Founder and Managing Director G R Gopinath, it will earn Rs 1,000 crore from 4 million passengers.
But then, most industry analysts agree that the Air Deccan business model is a textbook case of how to operate an LCC, with a few significant differences.
LCC by design
According to Kaul, compared to legacy carriers, Indian LCCs can shave 15 to 20 per cent off their costs just by tinkering with their design structure.
That means ripping out the business class and "" since business class generally allows for more legroom "" using the space so freed up to squeeze in more economy seats. That's not quite as uncomfortable as it sounds: most Indian LCCs have about 189 seats on a Boeing 737-800 aircraft.
The exception is Kingfisher, which is investing in a fleet of 11 new Airbus A320 by February 2006.
Typically Indian LCCs "" or even international biggies like Southwest and Ryan Air, for that matter "" opt for jet engine aircraft such as the Boeing 737 series or Airbus A320. Both are old warhorses, known for their relative fuel efficiency, operational flexibility and reliability.
The exception, as usual, is Air Deccan, which began with an ATR 42-320, a 48-seater turboprop aircraft (a small aircraft that uses a turbojet engine to drive an external propellor). The present fleet comprises 13 ATRS and five Airbus, all leased.
The airline is sticking with that mix even in the future: the company has ordered 32 ATRs and 32 Airbus, taking delivery of one aircraft every month over the next five years.
Quicker turn time is critical for LCCs' cost structures "" turn times of under 20 minutes can help an aircraft reduce its costs by 10 per cent.
LCCs also save significantly by abandoning the traditional distribution systems of legacy carriers. Full service airlines generally subscribe to global distribution systems (GDS) and computerised reservation systems (CRS) such as Galileo and Amadeus "" none of which come cheap.
There are two issues where LCCs gain "" and lose "" about equally. One relates to licensed staff. The acute shortage of trained pilots and flight engineers in India is well documented "" naturally, LCCs aren't exempt, either.
But it's not only about cutting costs. LCCs in India are looking at ways to increase revenues as well.
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