CAPA India calls for a new civil aviation policy that can enable a USD1 trillion economic contribution per annum by 2043
CAPA India
CAPA India is a leading aviation consulting, research, analytics and transaction advisory practice.
At its 35th Research Briefing on 20-Apr-2023, CAPA India outlined a roadmap for the formulation of a new civil aviation #policy, designed to support a transformational vision for what Indian aviation can aspire to be in 20 years from now.
In FY2023, India’s aviation system handled just less than 200 million airline passengers. CAPA India projects that it may need to be able to handle around 1.3+ billion passengers, with a commercial fleet of close to 4000 #aircraft, within 20 years if an aspirational and transformational path is pursued. This is an unconstrained forecast, but it would represent a market around 20% larger than the United States was prior to COVID. And it would mean that in less than 40 years the Indian market would have grown from the size of Las Vegas to the size of the entire United States.
Achieving such a dramatic ramp-up in scale will require a tremendous effort across the aviation eco-system. Each and every element of the industry will need to play their part to realise this opportunity. If realised, by FY2043 aviation could make a USD1 trillion annual contribution to the Indian economy, taking into account direct, indirect, induced and catalytic impacts. Even under a more conservative, linear growth scenario, India would still likely reach a market size similar to China pre-COVID.
Kapil Kaul, CEO & Director, CAPA India, stated that ‘Indian aviation is at a critical inflection point. The opportunities could have positive implications for generations to come. India has to choose whether it wishes to pursue a transformative, aspirational vision or more conservative, linear growth”.
Either way, the strategic impact that aviation could have on the economy and consumers, should inspire policy-makers, as well as industry leaders. The Ministry of Civil Aviation has been making serious and genuine efforts to transform the sector. But achieving the industry’s true long-term potential will require a new policy framework. Key issues that CAPA India identified include:
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Kapil Kaul added, “Why do we think this aspirational vision is possible? Because aviation is being taken more seriously in India than ever before. For example, the privatisation of Air India was a bold reform. This is expected to lead to a more stable market, led by two airlines with tremendous capabilities and patient capital. And the government and ministry have shown tremendous determination to address fiscal challenges, to privatise airports and to engage seriously and constructively with the industry. All of this has created an environment in which the design of a long-term policy to support an aspirational vision can be envisaged.”
India will see the emergence of mega carriers, of a size that do not currently exist in global aviation. This in turn will require mega-airports, mega-MROs, mega-ground handlers and mega-training facilities on a scale that may currently not be imaginable. This will require tremendous planning, preparation, execution and monitoring capabilities.
CAPA India will present its 36th Research Briefing on the ‘Emergence of Indian mega-carriers and their strategic impact on global aviation’ at 4pm IST on 25 May 2023. Complimentary registration at https://bit.ly/3AchMYz