Tag: Air India

  • Air India to bring 600 oxygen concentrators from US in next two days for private entities

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Air India will bring around 600 oxygen concentrators on its two US-India flights in the next two days, aviation industry sources said on Sunday.

    These oxygen concentrators have been ordered by private entities, the sources mentioned.

    Various hospitals across the country continue to grapple with a severe shortage of medical oxygen on Sunday even after receiving emergency supplies.

    Twenty people died at Delhi’s Jaipur Golden Hospital on Saturday amid a shortage of oxygen.

    Sources said Air India plans to bring around 10,000 oxygen concentrators for private entities in the coming weeks.

    When asked about this matter, Air India spokesperson said the airline is prepared to shoulder the responsibility of carrying oxygen concentrators or any consignment into India.

    “Obviously, Air India with its experience of international operations and wide-body fleet is fully capable of carrying a large volume of cargo consignments,” the spokesperson mentioned.

    “It goes without saying that we will continue to play a major role in transporting oxygen (equipment) and serve our nation in whatever role assigned to us,” the spokesperson said.

    A record single-day rise of 3,46,786 coronavirus cases pushed India’s tally of infection to 1,66,10,481, while active cases crossed the 25-lakh mark, according to the Union Health Ministry data updated on Saturday.

    The death toll rose to 1,89,544 with a record 2,624 more fatalities in a day, the data updated at 8 am showed.

  • Air India cancels UK flights after latter places India under its travel ‘red list’ due to spiralling COVID situation

    By ANI
    NEW DELHI: Amid the COVID-19 surge, Air India has cancelled all its flights from and to the United Kingdom from April 24 to 30 after the UK added India to its travel “red list”.

    In a statement, Air India said, “Passengers who were to travel between India and UK may note that in view of recent restrictions announced by the UK, flights from or to the UK stand cancelled from April 24 to April 30.”

    Further updates regarding rescheduling, refunds and waivers will be informed later, it added.

    It said, “Between April 24 to April 30, we are in the process to schedule once a week flight to the United Kingdom from Delhi and Mumbai.” The information regarding the same will also be updated on the website of Air India and social media channels, they said.

    The United Kingdom added India to its travel “red list” on a precautionary basis after reporting 103 cases of a coronavirus variant first identified in India, health minister Matt Hancock said on Monday.

    The British High Commission in India said that the decision is to help prevent the spread of variants of concern and protect the most vulnerable.

  • Air India Engineering Service Limited seeks Central intervention over delay in salary payment 

    By ANI
    NEW DELHI: A subsidiary company of Air India, Air India Engineering Service Limited (AIESL), has written a letter to Union Labour Ministry regarding delayed payment of salaries to its permanent employees by Air India. AIESL requested the Centre to take due cognisance of their concerns and to intervene in the matter immediately.

    “The purpose of writing this letter is to bring to your kind notice, the discrimination meted by Air India to AIESL permanent employees in the form of delayed payment of its salaries,” read the letter.

    “Till August 2020, salaries of both Air India and AIESL were coming together, but from September 2020 onwards, there has been complete discrimination and inordinate delay in payment of salaries to AIESL employees, with respect to Air India employees,” the letter added.

    The salaries to AIESL employees have still not been paid for the month of February while they were paid to employees of Air India on March 5 itself. 

  • Air India seeks to raise Rs 225-crore loan

    By Express News Service
    NEW DELHI:  Air India Ltd plans to raise up to Rs 225 crore through a short-term loan from domestic lenders by January 31 to refinance an earlier debt. The loan will carry a sovereign guarantee and lenders will have to submit their bids by 27 January. 

    As per the tender document, the loan will also be used for refinancing working capital. This short term loan (STL) will be for a period of one  year and is guaranteed by 18 aircraft, sundry debt and inventory. The airline intends to use the funds for refinancing its current loan.

    The development has come when the disinvestment process of the national carrier is under progress. The government is in the process of selling 100 per cent stake in the national carrier.  According to the government, multiple preliminary bids have been received in this regard, including that of Tata group and by a group of Air India employees. Officials said that the loan is required as the government has stopped infusing funds into the airline.

  • Air India unions write to CMD on ‘inordinate delay’ in salary disbursement to engineers

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: There has been an inordinate delay in the disbursement of salaries to aircraft maintenance engineers and executives working for Air India Engineering Services Limited (AIESL), claimed two unions in a letter to the airline’s Chairman and Managing Director Rajiv Bansal on Wednesday.

    The AIESL is a wholly owned subsidiary of Air India.

    In the letter, All India Aircraft Engineers’ Association and Air India Aircraft Engineers’ Association requested Bansal to address the issue of salary delay on priority basis.

    “It is very much heartbreaking and devastating to know that despite facing 40 per cent unilateral pay cut, AIESL employees are again being discriminated and are left high and dry without salaries while their counterparts in Air India/Alliance Air/Air India Express were paid salaries on 8th January itself,” the letter noted.

    It said this decision to pay salaries to one set of employees while inducing “inordinate delay” in disbursement of salaries of AIESL employees is leading to further resentment and unrest among the latter.

    “This is also against the conditions of our transfer from Air India to AIESL which has been communicated earlier also to the management,” it noted.

    In 2013, Air India hived off AIESL and made it a wholly owned subsidiary.

    On September 17 last year, the two unions had written a similar letter to Bansal about delay in salaries to aircraft maintenance engineers.

    In that letter, the unions had said: “We were transferred from Air India to AIESL during hive off with only condition that all our benefits, privileges, facilities, pay and allowances, perquisites and service conditions will remain unchanged.”

    Air India is currently under disinvestment process.

    Multiple entities have submitted their expression of interests (EOIs) for the debt-laden national carrier last month.

    The government is likely to reveal the names of qualified bidders during the coming weeks.

    After its unsuccessful attempt to sell Air India in 2018, the government in January 2020 restarted the divestment process and invited bids for selling 100 per cent of its equity in the state-owned airline, including Air India’s 100 per cent shareholding in Air India Express Ltd and 50 per cent in Air India SATS Airport Services Private Ltd.

  • Air India becomes 19th airline in world to fly plane over North pole

    Express News Service
    BENGALURU: It was only once in August 2019 that an aircraft by an Indian Airline flew over the North Pole. That was a validation flight by Air India aimed at proving to various regulators its prowess to fly over the the northernmost point on the planet. That solo effort has resulted in India getting clearance to fly over this icy, inhospitable region.

    Air India on Sunday become the 19th airline in the world to fly its plane over the North Pole. Flight no AI-176, steered by all-women cockpit crew achieved this historic feat. Guiding them every second was Air India’s  Executive Director of Flight Safety, Capt. Nivedita Bhasin. Bhasin already has her name etched in Indian aviation’s history books. When she was just 26 years, became the youngest women pilot in the world to fly a Boeing 737. She also flew the Second Dreamliner flight from Charleston in the US to India.

    Sharing her time on the flight, the Captain said, “It was the first Polar flight and also the longest, for Air India, and so I was brought in to monitor all safety related aspects. I travelled as an observer, and carried our spot checks in the cabin and on the ground in San Francisco. During the flight, I kept checking if everything was going on smooth and as per plan. “ she told The New Indian Express. 

    Work on the project began in 2016.  “Flying over the North Pole was possible due to years of preparation, by our Training, Operations and Flight Safety department. “ she said. 

    So how was the experience? “An exhilarating experience, to say the least. Ït was actually pitch dark and we could see nothing except a few Northern Lights far away. The sky was clear and the stars were shining, “she recalls 

    Explaining the challenges of flying in the North Pole, Capt. Bhasin said, “The polar region is very remote, inhospitable and always under ice cover. The crucial part is the inflight diversion, if any, followed by expeditious retrieval of passengers and crew.”

    A vital element for any trip to the Polar Region which is 10,000 kms away from the equator is that the levels of radiation present there needs to be continuously monitored. “Since radiation is harmful to health, it is imperative to ensure that it is at a minimum. In case, the radiation levels are high, there is an option of rerouting the flight by avoiding the Polar part. This decision can be taken by the Operations team up to 90 mins before the flight departure time,” she explained.

    To minimise risk to its crew, Air India has a limit on such flights and each crew member can travel on a North Pole flight only twice in a month, the Executive Director added. “We have made it today because of rigorous training, safety risk assessment and mitigation efforts. By routing through the North Pole, we cut fuel costs as well as time. Reduction of one hour of travel time saves more than 7 tonnes of fuel  and reduces Carbon emissions,” she added.

    The superior make of aircraft over the years too has made such a feat possible. “Planes are now twin-engined as compared to four in the past. Over time, the reliability of engines has improved and there are remote chances of an inflight engine shutdown,” Captain Bhasin said.

    Some interesting aspects about a flight that would undertake a Polar trip is that there is an exclusive hotline to a doctor available through satellite phone to help anyone in any emergency. “There is also a Rescue Aircraft kept as standby which can rush whenever required,” she explained.

    But was the move to make the first commercial trip by any Indian airline over the Polar region by an all-women team a daring step taken? “Not at all. Indian women have always been big achievers in aviation since 1966 when we had our first pilot Captain Durba Banerjee. Way back in 1985 itself, we had flown the world’s first all-women crew flight ,””she said. 

  • Rahul Gandhi lauds all-women crew for completing Air India’s longest flight

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Monday congratulated an all-women pilot team of Air India for completing the national carrier’s longest flight from San Francisco to Bengaluru after flying over the North Pole.

    Air India’s longest direct flight from San Francisco to Bengaluru with the all-women cockpit crew successfully landed in the southern city on Monday.

    “Congratulations to the all-women cockpit crew for completing Air India’s longest flight from San Francisco to Bengaluru over the North Pole.

    “You have made the country proud,” Gandhi said on Twitter.

    The national carrier had said this flight would be the longest commercial flight in the world to be operated by any Indian airline and the total flight time on this route would be more than 17 hours depending on the wind speed on that day.

    The direct distance between the two cities at opposite ends of the world is 13,993 km with a time zone change of around 13.5 hours.

  • Four passengers on Air India’s London-Delhi flight test positive for COVID-19

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Four passengers travelling on Air India’s London-Delhi flight tested positive for COVID-19 on arrival, a top official of Genestrings Diagnostic Centre said on Monday.

    Genestrings runs a lab at the Delhi airport to test incoming passengers for COVID-19.

    All flights connecting the UK and India were suspended from December 23 to January 7 by the central government as a new variant of coronavirus emerged in that country.

    Air India’s AI162 flight landed at the Delhi airport at 10:30 pm on Sunday.

    “All testing completed within three hours and passengers released within 7.5 hours, even with positive cases,” Gauri Agarwal, the founder of Genestrings Diagnostic Centre, said.

    “There were total 186 passengers on AI162 London-Delhi flight. Four of them have tested positive for COVID-19,” she added.

  • Flown by four women pilots, Air India’s longest direct route flight lands in Bengaluru

    Express News Service
    BENGALURU: It marked a glorious moment for flyers when Air India’s Boeing 777-237 Long Range aircraft touched down at the Kempegowda International Airport at 3.07 am on Monday and later taxied to its bay by 3.25 am, a good 20 minutes before the scheduled arrival time.

    Passengers between Bengaluru and San Francisco can now travel seamlessly between these two cities without a stop over at any other palce.

    What makes flight number AI176, the longest flight ever operated by an Indian airline, so special is that it is also an all-women crew. 

    The four-member team of Captain Zoya Aggarwal, Captain Papagari Thanmai, Akansha Sonaware and Shivani Manhas as well as Captain Nivedita Bhasin, Executive Director, Flight Safety Section, who accompanied were given a round of applause by passengers and visitors to the airport when they emerged out the ‘Arrivals’ gate.

    Air India’s all-women cockpit crew’s first non-stop flight from San Francisco to Bengaluru landed at the Kempegowda International Airport.Express Photos | @ashishhpendse @XpressBengaluru pic.twitter.com/ez9X23WMbR
    — The New Indian Express (@NewIndianXpress) January 11, 2021

    They had broad smiles on their faces with the joy of their achievement helping them overcome the fatigue of covering a distance of 13, 933 kms between the two cities in nearly 16 hours. Airport staffers also handed them red roses.

    Among the first passengers to come out of the terminal was 78-year-old Govinda Naidu and his son Ramana Anugant. “I have waited 20 years for this day. I have brought my 78-year-old father and 67-year-old mother along. They both cannot walk properly and use wheel chairs. We do not have to change over at Delhi or Mumbai. It is such a relief.” 

    ​ALSO READ | Meet Yelahanka resident, the Commander of first non-stop flight from Bengaluru to San Francisco

    71-year-old Subramaniam from Malleswaram who paid 1811 dollars for a business seat said, “I got stuck in my daughter’s house in California due to the Covid epidemic for a year now. I finally decided to come home and it is such a relief to have a direct flight like this.”

    Agarwal, commander of the flight said, “Today, we created world history by not only flying over the North Pole but also having all women pilots who successfully did it.”

    Billing the trip as “a fantastic experience” Aggarwal said that it  challenging to fly over the North Pole. We have to be very careful when we enter the Polar Region and have received training for it. When you come out, it is completely dark.

    29-year-old Captain Shivani Manas from J & K said, “I have just four years experience. I feel blessed to be given such an opportunity. This is an unforgettable day in my life.”

    At 2.30 pm, the flight from Bengaluru towards San Francisco (AI 175) will depart with an all male crew commanded by CV Madhu. All the 238 seats on it have been booked.

  • Air India​’s all-women cockpit crew takes off on historic San Francisco-Bengaluru flight

    By PTI
    BENGALURU: An all-women cockpit crew set out on a history journey, operating Air India’s inaugural San Francisco-Bengaluru flight, going over the North Pole and taking the Atlantic route to reach the Karnataka capital at the other end of the world.

    The flight number AI176 left San Francisco on Saturday at 8.30 PM (local time) and would arrive here at 3.45 AM on Monday, according to Air India sources.

    Union Minister for Civil Aviation, Hardeep Singh Puri tweeted, “Way to go girls! Professional, qualified & confident, the all women cockpit crew takes off from San Francisco to Bengaluru on @airindiain’s flight to fly over the North Pole. Our Nari Shakti achieves a historic first.”

    ALSO READ: Meet Yelahanka resident, the Commander of first non-stop flight from Bengaluru to San Francisco

    Air India has said this will be the longest commercial flight in the world to be operated by it or any other airline in India.

    The total flight time on this route will be more than 17 hours depending on the wind speed on that particular day, it had said in a statement on the eve of the historic flight.

    #FlyAI : Initial captures before we embarked on the historic flight AI 176 @flySFO to @BLRAirport . pic.twitter.com/6WGCLtLt22
    — Air India (@airindiain) January 10, 2021

    Members of the crew are: Captain Zoya Aggarwal, Captain Papagari Thanmai, Captain Akansha Sonaware and Captain Shivani Manhas.

    Air India too expressed its elation when it tweeted, “Imagine this : -All Women Cockpit Crew.-Longest flight into India.-Crossing the North Pole It’s here & happening! Records broken. History in the making by AI176 from @flySFO to @BLRAirport. AI 176 is cruising at 30000 feet.”