MUMBAI: Vistara plans to launch a handful of new routes next quarter as it approaches the end of its time as a standalone Indian airline, Chief Executive Officer Vinod Kannan said.
The full-service carrier will deploy new aircraft that are pending delivery for mostly international routes, Kannan said at an event to mark the introduction of Vistara’s daily Delhi-Hong Kong service Monday.The inaugural flight was more than 90% full and demand looks very strong throughout November, he said.
Vinod Kannan, chief executive officer of Vistara, speaks at CAPA India, in New Delhi, India, on Monday, March 20, 2023. India wants to be a powerhouse in air transport, according to Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia, who kicked off the three-day CAPA India Aviation Summit Monday. Photographer: Prakash Singh/Bloomberg
“We will continue to expand internationally and we feel that demand will continue to grow,” Kannan told reporters in Hong Kong. “There will be two or three more new routes coming through in the first quarter of next year,” he said separately.
Vistara has already announced it will soon start flights to Bali from India’s capital, as well as to Frankfurt from Mumbai. Paris is another possible route from the Indian financial hub, Kannan said.
Vistara, co-owned by Tata Group and Singapore Airlines Ltd, is being merged with Air India Ltd.
Founded a decade ago, the airline is expected to gradually disappear when regulatory antitrust hurdles to the combination are cleared, with jobs, aircraft and routes being transferred to Air India. Vistara’s flight schedules will be refined once merger approvals go through, and other aspects such as uniforms, aircraft livery and airport signage updated.
The airline operates 63 aircraft, mostly Airbus SE single-aisle jets, and some Boeing Co. 787s, flying to 32 domestic and 16 overseas destinations. Kannan said international flights will account for 40% of Vistara’s operations by the end of the financial year.
“The focus has been international, that is where we think we bring more value to the table,” he said.
The full-service carrier will deploy new aircraft that are pending delivery for mostly international routes, Kannan said at an event to mark the introduction of Vistara’s daily Delhi-Hong Kong service Monday.The inaugural flight was more than 90% full and demand looks very strong throughout November, he said.
Vinod Kannan, chief executive officer of Vistara, speaks at CAPA India, in New Delhi, India, on Monday, March 20, 2023. India wants to be a powerhouse in air transport, according to Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia, who kicked off the three-day CAPA India Aviation Summit Monday. Photographer: Prakash Singh/Bloomberg
“We will continue to expand internationally and we feel that demand will continue to grow,” Kannan told reporters in Hong Kong. “There will be two or three more new routes coming through in the first quarter of next year,” he said separately.
Vistara has already announced it will soon start flights to Bali from India’s capital, as well as to Frankfurt from Mumbai. Paris is another possible route from the Indian financial hub, Kannan said.
Vistara, co-owned by Tata Group and Singapore Airlines Ltd, is being merged with Air India Ltd.
Founded a decade ago, the airline is expected to gradually disappear when regulatory antitrust hurdles to the combination are cleared, with jobs, aircraft and routes being transferred to Air India. Vistara’s flight schedules will be refined once merger approvals go through, and other aspects such as uniforms, aircraft livery and airport signage updated.
The airline operates 63 aircraft, mostly Airbus SE single-aisle jets, and some Boeing Co. 787s, flying to 32 domestic and 16 overseas destinations. Kannan said international flights will account for 40% of Vistara’s operations by the end of the financial year.
“The focus has been international, that is where we think we bring more value to the table,” he said.