Showing posts with label Trivandrum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trivandrum. Show all posts

Infographic: India's ten busiest airports: June 2013 vs. June 2012

by Vinay Bhaskara

June was a mostly positive month for traffic at India's ten busiest airports. As the table below shows, traffic grew at eight airports, while declining at just two. Total traffic at India's ten busiest airports grew around 2% year-over-year to roughly 10.7 million passengers, positive news after some declines in passenger traffic earlier this year. There were no changes in the top ten, either in constitution or in order, though Bangalore moved closer to surpassing Chennai as India's third busiest airport as traffic grew 2.4% against a drop of 1.2% at Chennai. Just outside the top ten, fast growing Srinagar surpassed Goa to become India's 11th busiest airport in June, and will likely surpass Trivandrum by the end of the year (Srinagar trailed Trivandrum by 11,000 passengers in June).

AirportJune 2013June 2012YOY Growth
Delhi (DEL)313313530727802.0%
Mumbai (BOM)257360024942023.2%
Chennai (MAA)10772671090302-1.2%
Bengaluru (BLR)10221589983022.4%
Kolkata (CCU)854846890240-4.0%
Hyderabad (HYD)7116777029401.2%
Kochi (COK)42825138256611.9%
Ahmedabad (AMD)3565583482732.4%
Pune(PNQ)2974212764967.6%
Trivandrum (TRV)2439682320245.1%
TOTAL10698881104881252.0%

The following chart shows traffic India's top ten airports in June 2013 vs. June 2012 (click for a larger view)



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IndiGo launches new domestic and international flights

IndiGo cabin crew, new uniforms, new look.
IndiGo cabin crew.Photo courtesy IndiGo.
With the addition of its 64th new Airbus A320, India largest domestic carrier, IndiGo, has launched eight new flights on its domestic network.
  • The fifth daily and direct flight between Delhi and Chennai,
  • The second daily and direct flight between Delhi and Kochi
  • The fourth daily and direct flight between Mumbai and Chennai
  • The fourth daily and direct flight between Mumbai and Kolkata

On the international front, IndiGo launched
  • The first daily and direct flight between Thiruvananthapuram and Dubai, 
  • The second daily and direct flight between Mumbai and Dubai,
  • Shifted its Delhi Singapore flight to Chennai Singapore.

This takes IndiGo's flight tally to 399 flights to 33 destinations
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IndiGo concentrates Dubai presence with second Mumbai and first Thiruvananthapuram service

by Devesh Agarwal
Gurgaon based IndiGo will commence a daily service between Kerala's capital Thiruvananthapuram (Trivandrum) and Dubai from March 1, 2013.

6E 038 will depart Thiruvananthapuram 18:20 arrive Dubai 21:15
6E 037 will depart Dubai 11:25 arrive Thiruvananthapuram 17:15

On the same day the carrier will commence its second daily flight between Mumbai and Dubai.

6E 063 will depart Mumbai 08:35 arrive Dubai 10:25
6E 064 will depart Dubai 11:25 arrive Mumbai 15:55

The launch of these two flights will coincide with the launch of IndiGo's flights between Chennai and Singapore.

6E 053 will depart Chennai 22:00 arrive Singapore 04:50+1 (the next morning)
6E 054 will depart Singapore 05:50 arrive Chennai 07:15

These three launches come after the airline will completely withdraw from Singapore by terminating its current New Delhi Singapore and Mumbai Singapore flights, and scale back by withdrawal of its Mumbai Bangkok service.

With the launch of the two Dubai services, IndiGo will operate a total of 56 weekly flights between India and Dubai.

With the increased focus on Dubai, by Indian airlines like Jet Airways which operates 42 flights, SpiceJet, which operates 49, not counting the flights by the traditional operators like Air India with 60 flights, Air India Express with 63, and the 189 wide-body weekly services operated by behemoth Emirates, one has to serious consider the serious glut of capacity to this tiny Emirate.

Share your thoughts via a comment.

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Exclusive interview: G.M. Toh, General Manager India, Singapore Airlines

Singapore Airlines (SQ) is one of the most respected airlines in the world. Bangalore Aviation was honoured to have an exclusive one-on-one with Mr. G.M. Toh, the airline's head in India.

Q. Please give us an overview of the trends you’ve seen in the Indian market over the past 6 months? What do you see in the next 6 months? 12 months? 24 months?
The air travel as a whole is dependent on the world economy. While a lot of air travel is essential, there is a high component of discretionary travel as well, and when there is a slow down, both corporations and individuals cut back on air travel. So yes, there has been an impact on Singapore Airlines.

In India, travel was good till end last year. The Indian domestic market was recording double digit growth. The growth slowed down by the start of the fiscal to single digits, and in the last few months we are seeing a contraction. It is a shocking slowdown, especially considering the Indian economy is growing at 5%~5.5% and normally air travel growth is 2x the economic growth. Clearly there are some other factors at play. This is purely my personal view, it is possible that the current economic growth is being driven by rural India where air travel is not significant. The increases in air fares could also be a factor, but I feel there is a softening of demand.

On Singapore Airlines itself, we are a listed company so we are not allowed to disclose information that is not already published and available to public. At a macro level, if you see the last published resulted for the fiscal year ended March 2012, our performance has been impacted considerably, especially in the last fiscal quarter i.e. January to March 2012. In the quarter one of fiscal 2013 i.e. April to June, 2012, the results were better than expected, but the overall results are not as good. While we are still reporting profits, margins are slim and not at previous levels.

Our growth has moderated. Long haul flights are very challenging for us, given the high fuel prices. We have had to cut back on longer haul flights like Houston, but growth this year is focussed on Asia. We have added services to China, Indonesia, a little bit to Australia, and to India.

At Mumbai, we are growing from 14 services a week from Mumbai to 21 from November, a 50% growth. At Hyderabad we are increasing Silkair services from a daily, to nine a week. We have announced new SilkAir services to Vishakhapatanam (Vizag). In total we will grow from about 79~80 fights a week in July 2011, to 93, a growth of 14 flights, which is good considering these depressed times. 50% of this growth has been in Mumbai were we have traffic rights. As you know our traffic rights to the top five cities of India are very constrained, so we add where we can.

Q. A lot of growth is on SilkAir (MI) rather than Singapore Airlines. Is this growth, a brand driven exercise, or an aircraft driven one, considering Singapore Airlines has only wide body aircraft, while SilkAir has only narrow body (A320 family) aircraft?

It is a little complicated. By and large it is aircraft driven. A lot of the newer destinations like Vizag and Coimbatore, cannot handle larger aircraft. There are also factors like traffic rights. We are unable to expand to the larger Indian cities due to constrained traffic rights. The newer destinations are smaller cities and we operate narrow bodies due to traffic capacities and economic reasons.

Q. How do the forward bookings for Indian travel look given the economic slowdown here and continuing economic woes in the rest of the world?

There is no doubt there is a softening of demand across domestic and international travel, but due to our added services and destination we are overall okay compared to last year, but I am sorry I cannot give specifics.

Q. How is competition from the MEB3 (Middle East Big 3 Three - Emirates, Qatar, Etihad) affecting Singapore Airlines, especially on the India to US routes?

We do not compete too much with MEB3. Their main markets from India are the middle east, Africa, Europe and to a lesser extent the United States. To the US east coast, frankly, they [MEB3] compete with the European carriers. To the west coast, which is a far smaller market than the east coast, from the south and east of India we compete well. From the west and north, the routing does not favour us as much. We operate two flights a day each to San Francisco and Los Angeles. Most of our traffic from India is to the east i.e. Asia and Australia / New Zealand, and there the MEB3 routing does not afford them to compete with us.

Q. Singapore Airlines currently operates its 777-300ER with the 1-2-1 ultra-premium business class product on the red-eye flights from Delhi and Mumbai, but does not on its remaining Indian sectors, especially Bangalore. Please give us insight as to why this is?

There are two factors. The 777-300ER is space intensive cabin, specifically meant for long distance flights. Our business class is an ultra-wide 1-2-1, 4 abreast configuration compared to the 2-2-2, 6 abreast of our competitors. Even our economy we have a nine abreast economy cabin, while some of the big middle east carriers are flying ten across. [Editor's note: Emirates and Etihad, and now Jet Airways have this 10 abreast ultra-narrow configuration].

So our 777-300ER has only 276 seats compared to 330~340 seats of our competitor. We have put in fewer seats recognising that long haul flights require more comfort for our passengers. Mumbai and New Delhi are like Shanghai and Beijing in China. One is the commercial capital, one is the national capital, and in recognition of the commercial importance of these markets, we limit operations of the 777-300ERs to these cities, both in India and China.

The second factor. You will observe world-wide airlines are cutting back on the traditional three class aircraft of First, Business and Economy. First class is a very limited product and very few routes can remuneratively sustain First class, on a regular basis. You will observe we offer a First class only to Mumbai and Delhi in India, Shanghai and Beijing in China, Sydney and Melbourne in Australia, Auckland in New Zealand, and Tokyo in Japan.

In response to your question, why not Bangalore. Bangalore has good corporate demand and good business class traffic, but it does not have a sustainable First class demand. Across the world for markets similar to Bangalore, most carriers, including Singapore Airlines operate a two class aircraft. So we do not operate our 777-300ER which has a First class cabin due to market matching.

Q. How does the financial performance look on the secondary Indian routes by Silkair to airports like Coimbatore, Kochi, and Trivandrum ?

It is no secret that Singapore Airlines and Silkair are aggressively cutting back non-performing routes. We left Amritsar in 2009 for example. Coming to these secondary routes, we started Trivandrum (Thiruvananthapuram) in 1991, Kochi in 2001, Coimbatore in 2007, and the fact that we are still operating these routes, suggest they are doing okay. Two factors work for us. First is the immigration to Singapore and Malaysia from southern states of India, especially Tamil Nadu and Kerala, which leads to a natural demand for the family driven traffic, and the needs of travelers from these cities to connect to the world which we provide from our Singapore hub. [Editor's note: Singapore Airlines is a handful of carriers belonging to the "six continents club" i.e. offering flights to all six populated continents of the world].

Q. How are the LCCs like AirAsia, IndiGo and Tiger Airways competing with you in India? We have seen a lot of churn with AirAsia withdrawing from many stations?

Devesh, you are very knowledgeable about the industry, and you know Singapore is the epicentre of low cost carriers in Asia. These are purely my own thinking. There are two reasons why low cost carriers have done so well at Singapore.

First, we have a very liberal, business friendly attitude and policies in Singapore. JetStar Asia is very big in Singapore, and even though it is 51% owned by a Singapore business house, it is effectively run by Qantas who owns 49%. So, from about 2003, when LCCs started operating in Singapore, their traffic share has gone from single digits to over 26% today on a base of about 45 million passengers annually.

Secondly, Singapore is a strong yielding market. Our strong economy and strong currency, it allows LCCs to price lower than full service carriers, but yet make their operations viable.

India is a challenging market for anyone, but especially for low cost carriers. Indian LCCs who dominate the domestic market, now enjoy operational efficiencies which makes it very hard for foreign low cost carriers to compete against them. Another aspect to consider is that India is a low yielding market compared to many destinations in the Gulf or ASEAN region. So foreign LCCs choose to deploy capacities to higher yielding markets, especially in these tough times.

Q. How much scope for expansion does Singapore Airlines see for more Indian service, whether that be capacity/frequency increases, or new routes?

Traffic rights still remain the constraining factor. If we get additional rights, I leave it to your educated guess to where we would like to expand. [Editor's note: It would be New Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai]. Last year, in Chennai, we were forced to reduce our SilkAir services in favour of Tiger Airways. So we are facing a further dilution of traffic rights.

Q. Given that Tiger Airways is making a resurgence in India, as a knowledgeable industry professional, what are your thoughts about Scoot in India?

If you see Scoot is expanding in to those countries where we have open skies or very liberal third and fourth freedom rights. Australia, China, Thailand, Taiwan and Japan. I think Scoot is focussed on economic returns and since they have modified their 777-200's to 400+ seats, they are only looking at high volume routes. There are some cities in India which are high volume enough to sustain Scoot, but traffic rights are the constraint.

Q. Is there a scenario wherein Singapore Airlines would operate the A380 to India, and is it already allowed to?

We have ordered 19 A380's all of which have been delivered. They are deployed on long distance, high volume, high yielding routes. London Heathrow is THE airport the A380 was built for. As present we have no plans for bringing the A380 in India. If you observe, we operate the A380 to Hong Kong which is 3.5 hours, but then we operate seven flights a day one of which is the A380. I am not sure any destination in India will justify it, at least for now. For the future, I look forward to India growing and generating these levels of traffic.

Q. What has been the effect of the wing rib cracks on the A380?

When this matter showed up, there was some initial juggling of the schedules and I think the initial issues have been settled, but I am not an expert on this matter.

Q. Can you share any insight into the business/leisure breakdown of Singapore Airlines proper’s Indian operation (i.e how much of the traffic is business traffic and how much is leisure) ?

We do have a good mix of both, but I cannot share more information than that.

Q. Can you share what percentage of Singapore Airlines’ Indian traffic is origin and destination (O and D) and what percentage is connecting onwards through Singapore (6th freedom)?

Devesh you are already well informed. But for those who want greater detail, I recommend your readers see the CAG report. If you see the top ten airlines, most of them are in the 70%~80% range [connecting vs. O and D]. Lufthansa was around 87%. Clearly these airlines are carrying Indian passengers to the world not to their countries. Singapore Airlines was one of the lowest with a very healthy mix of about 50% passengers flying to Singapore and 50% going beyond. Which is not surprising considering the historical ethnic links and the over 300,000 Indian permanent residents in Singapore, and 900,000 visitors from India in Singapore. Unfortunately we get clubbed with the other airlines and our traffic rights are constrained.

Q. What does SQ/MI look forward to, from the Indian government, in terms of aviation policy? What in your opinion should be some initiatives the Indian government must take in the civil aviation sector? Comments on Indian airports, charges, facilities? What does SQ/MI look to from airports in the future? In current stations? In future stations?

To be fair to the airport operators, they moved from the old airports terminals to these spanking new facilities. This costs a lot of money, and we recognise someone has to pay for it. Our issue is how the payment burden is structured. To have such a huge increase, implemented all in one go, and in some cases, almost retrospectively, is not the way business should be done. As an example, at Delhi, just the passenger fee increases represents a double-digit percentage increase in total fare outgo by the passenger. Even the increases on landing and parking charges for us is over seven digits and we operate only two flights a day. It is not fair.

As a comparison, Singapore Changi airport, after many many years, is increasing the passenger fee by S$6. This is effective April 1, 2013, and this increase was announced two months ago, giving the airlines a lead time of over six months, and is valid only on tickets sold after November 1, 2012. Indian airports need to do fare increases in an orderly, planned and gradual manner, giving all the stake-holders time to adjust and to enable passengers to make their ticket purchases with their eyes wide open on the total costs. The suddenness and quantum of the increase is having its impact on marginal airlines.

I have been in India now for 22 months and I have seen 17 airports. I must admit, I am very impressed by some of the new airport terminals coming up. For example Chandigarh, Amritsar, or Vizag. We recognise there is a cost to be paid for these new terminals, what industry needs is for the power that is, to recognise that we all want better facilities, but we all need to find better ways of managing costs and distributing them in a fair and equitable manner.

One fundamental issue that has come up from the Delhi airport saga, is that, while PPP [Public Private Partnership] is good, but if you have AAI taking such a large chunk of the revenue collected, as its share, makes the job very challenging for the operator, and is a key reason why charges have gone up by some much.

Thank you Mr. Toh. Its been a pleasure.
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Maldivian Adds Service between Male and Chennai/Mumbai

Earlier today, Maldivian national carrier Maldivian announced that it would be adding new flights between its hub at Ibrahim Nasir International Airport in Male, and Mumbai and Chennai. The new flights would operate 3 times per week, and are being launched from November of this year along with Dhaka, Bangladesh (also a thrice weekly operation).


The flights to Mumbai will operate Wednesday / Friday / Sunday, while the flights to Chennai will operate alternately on Tuesday / Thursday /Saturday. All flights are expected to be operated with Maldivian’s newly ordered Airbus A320 aircraft (for lease), which are to be configured in an all economy class 152 seat configuration, though no official aircraft choice has been announced. Given that Maldivian’s current fleet of 5 aircraft is exclusively composed of Bombardier Dash 8 Q200/300 turboprop aircraft (37 and 50 seats respectively) which cannot make the 757 mile route to Chennai or the 1025 mile route to Mumbai nonstop from Male nonstop.

 Indirect competition will be provided by India’s national carrier Air India, which serves Bangalore and Trivandrum from Male. Additionally, Maldivian itself serves Trivandrum. There are also news reports that Maldivian will add New Delhi in 2013, but firm plans have not yet been announced.

The success of this route will primarily depend on tourism from the Indian end, which numbered 30,000 in 2011 according to the Maldives Ministry of Tourism, as well as medical travel from the Male end.
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Overview of Singapore Airlines' and subsidiary SilkAir's India operations

The world's best airline, Singapore Airlines will be effecting a significant change in its scheduled operations at Mumbai starting from the Winter 2011 schedule which goes in to effect on October 30th. The carrier is also strengthening the operations of its regional subsidiary SilkAir across India.

Singapore Airlines Boeing 777-300ER 9V-SWD at Mumbai, India
Mumbai
Currently the carrier operates double daily flights between the financial capital of India and the island nation. A Boeing 777-200 flight with 36 business and 228 economy class seats in the morning, and a Boeing 777-300ER with 8 first, 42 business, and 228 economy class seats on an overnight flight.

In the winter schedule the airline is increasing the Singapore Mumbai flights from 14 to 17 a week.

It's reducing the morning SQ421 777-200 flights from a daily to three per week which will operate Mondays, Saturdays and Sundays, departing Singapore at 02:30 and arriving Mumbai at 05:30. On the return departing Mumbai at 07:30 and arriving Singapore at 15:25. This morning service appears to be designed for the IT industry passengers to connect to the Singpore - North American west coast services which arrive in to Singapore a little after midnight and depart Singapore around 17:00 in the evening.

The airline will continue its daily SQ423 Boeing 777-300ER service which departs Singapore at 19:55 and arrives Mumbai at 22:50. On the return leaving Mumbai just after midnight and arrives Singapore at 08:00.

Singapore Airlines Boeing 777-200 retrofit upgrade 9V-SRM at Mumbai, Bombay, India.The carrier is adding a new daily service SQ425 which will operate using the 36/228 Boeing 777-200, departing Singapore at 18:10 arriving Mumbai 21:05. On the return leaving Mumbai 22:20 arriving Singapore the next morning at 06:15.

This, in our opinion, is a brilliant move by the carrier. This earlier flight addresses a common complaint of many business travellers who want earlier arrivals in the respective cities to have a full business day. This flight also allows Singapore Airlines to give its Mumbai passengers quicker connections to ASEAN and near east destinations on early morning flights which depart Singapore before 8am.

Ahmedabad
Singapore Airlines will increase its twice weekly (Tuesdays and Saturdays) flights to thrice weekly (Tuesday, Thursday, Sunday) using an Airbus A330-300 in a 30 business and 255 economy class configuration.

Bangalore
The carrier continues its daily overnight Boeing 777-200 service. From earlier this month, the regional subsidiary of Singapore Airlines, SilkAir has increased its four a week mid-day flights to five a week. Three flights are operated thrice a week (Thursday~ Saturday) with an Airbus A320 (12/138 config) and twice a week (Mondays and Wednesdays) with an Airbus A319 (8/120 or 12/106 config). In bound the flight departs Singapore 13:10 arrives Bangalore 15:00 and returns leaving Bangalore 15:50 and arrives Singapore at 22:55.

The timings of the SilkAir flight limits connections beyond Singapore to only North Asia and Australia-New Zealand, and the carrier is reporting good passenger load factors. Keeping in mind that Bangalore is the IT capital of India with significant traffic to the US West Coast, the airline management should consider changing the schedule to position this flight as a day flight to connect to those US West Coast flights which arrive in to Singapore between 01:30 and 03:30 and depart around 17:00 in the evening. A possible schedule will be departing Singapore 06:00 arriving Bangalore 08:00 departing Bangalore 09:00 arriving Singapore 16:00. This will also given the flight connections in to ASEAN and near east destinations.

Rest of India
Singapore Airlines continues its double daily to New Delhi using a Boeing 777-200 in the morning and a Boeing 777-300 for the overnight flight in a 8 first 50 business and 226 economy class confguration. Kolkata is operated thrice a week with an Airbus A330-300, Chennai is operated daily with a Boeing 777-200.

SilkAir
SilkAir Airbus A319 9V-SBD at Bangalore, IndiaSingapore Airlines is using its regional subsidiary SilkAir aggressively in India. The carrier operates daily flights to Hyderabad and Kochi, six a week to Chennai, five a week to Bangalore, four a week to Kolkata, and three a week each to Coimbatore and Trivandram (Thiruvanathapuram). Thanks to usage of narrow-body Airbus A320 and A319 aircraft, SilkAir is perceived as a low cost carrier, despite being a full service carrier with, many a time, fares higher than its parent, Singapore Airlines.

Singapore Airline's fleet to India
The carrier's Boeing 777-300ER is widely considered as having the most luxurious cabin product in the world, with only four abreast seating in business class and economy class seats with a 19 inch width and 32 inch pitch, along with a state of the art audio-video on demand (AVOD) in-flight entertainment (IFE) system.

Next in comfort is the new Airbus A330 fleet which features an industry leading 18.6 inch seat width and 32 inch seat pitch with full iPod support in economy class, and a luxurious business class featuring the inclined lay-flat SpaceBed seats in a 2-2-2 abreast configuration. (Click for images of both classes).

The Boeing 777-200 and 777-300 have been given a retrofit. The business class is similar to the business class in the A330s, but the economy class seat is 17.9 inches width with a 32 inch pitch in a 9 abreast 3-3-3 configuration. It is better than the 10 abreast 17 inch width of Emirates but falls short of the 9 abreast 19 inch width in its own Boeing 777-300ERs as well as those of Qatar Airways.
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Kingfisher Airlines "bomb" planter caught, BIAL security vindicated

Eight days ago, on Sunday 21st March, a so-called bomb was discovered on board a Kingfisher Airlines aircraft at Bengaluru International Airport (BIA) early morning.

As usual, TimesNow TV tried to make a huge mountain out of a molehill claiming that a "bomb" was discovered and defused.

In reality about a teaspoon full of black powder, the type used in fire-crackers, was found wrapped in a Malayalam (the state language of Kerala) newspaper during the early morning checks of the aircraft before it began its day with a flight to Kochi, the commercial capital of Kerala state.

The five layer in-line security at BIA has been rated at par with the best European airports, and video recording of all baggage scans are archived. The recordings of checked-in baggage screening showed nothing extraordinary. The CISF which checks hand-baggage also found nothing unusual in their screening process.

Given the wrapping of a Kerala newspaper, it was surmised that the black powder package may have been placed in the inbound flight from Thiruvanathapuram (Trivandrum), the state capital of Kerala, and the last flight aircraft made before its night halt in Bangalore. It is possible that the security of Kingfisher Airlines may have missed this minuscule package during their anti-sabotage checks in the dark of the night.

It is but natural that this hot potato was bounced between the airline, CISF at both Bangalore and Trivandrum, and AAI Trivandrum and BIAL in Bangalore over the last week, with no one wanting it to land in their laps.

The newspaper wrapping proved to be the downfall of the mischief monger. Trivandrum police discovered that the paper was of an edition distributed in one particular village, about 25 km south of the capital, and yesterday, arrested Rajasekaran who turns out to be an ex-CISF cadre, now working for a private company providing handling services to Kingfisher Airlines at Trivandrum. Investigations are on-going as to his motive, but mischief appears to be the likely cause.

The last few days prior to this incident had seen a heightened security alert at Bangalore, and after the "bomb" discovery, security at BIA went in to hyper-drive.

I was travelling to Malaysia on 21st night and was carrying a bag full of some electronic test components. I was given the full once over by BIA security who stripped my bag down, even opening up the lining for a complete inspection. This is despite the BIAL terminal operations officials accompanying me to the security check-point to vouch for me.

Not that I mind, in fact I welcome such vigilant security and I want to report to the readers of Bangalore Aviation the stringency of the security at Bengaluru International Airport and that no exceptions are made, even to known persons.
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Air Asia to commence services to Kochi, Trivandrum, Kolkata

Malaysian low-cost carrier Air Asia has confirmed dates to launch scheduled passengers services from Kuala Lumpur to three more cities in India.

One November 12th, Asia Asia will begin services to Kochi (Cochin) the commercial capital of Kerala, four days later on November 16th to Thiruvananthapuram (Trivandrum) the political capital of Kerala and three days after that to the West Bengal capital of Kolkata on November 19th.

These daily services will use Airbus A320s and Air Asia will be the sole carrier on these three routes.

Air Asia already operates on the Kuala Lumpur-Tiruchirappalli (Trichy) route.
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