The aviation sector has been significantly impacted due to the travel restrictions imposed in India and other countries in view of the pandemic
Business has begun humming again as airlines look to snap up the greener passenger and freight planes they believe will give them an edge in a post-pandemic recovery driven by predicted travel demand
Airlines are having trouble hiring pilots, flight attendants and other personnel, and that's part of what is causing canceled flights and scrapping of service to some airports.
The Transportation Security Administration says that passenger checkpoints are nearly as busy now as they were in 2019
Demand continues to be subdued from the corporate traveller segment, says ICRA vice-president
A reply to the notice has been sought from the station manager of the airlines within 24 hours
AirAsia India on Friday introduced an in-flight safety manual in braille in collaboration with the Helen Keller Institute for the Deaf and Deafblind for the visually impaired.
Anthony Fauci said Wednesday he viewed the restrictions on the eight countries as a 'temporary measure'.
The unions, which have been pressing for restoration of salary cuts, have cited resumption of scheduled international flights and rollback of pay cuts by other airlines to justify their demand.
The pandemic may have willy-nilly created an opportunity to correct the anomalies of the past
On the domestic front, air traffic is nearing pre-Covid-19 levels and grew 70 per cent in October compared with the year-ago period.
The country's civil aviation sector has almost reached the pre-COVID level in terms of traffic and will continue to grow further, officials said on Thursday
IndiGo in October 2021 flew 48.07 lakh passengers, accounting for 53.5 per cent of the total domestic traffic
The carriers had not been allowed to serve meals in flights, which have duration of less than two hours, since April 15 due to the Covid pandemic
Among the major airlines, while Vistara is adding the highest number of flights (a 21.73 per cent increase over winter 2019), SpiceJet is seeing the highest drop
Emirates, the biggest carrier by international traffic, is planning to hire 6,000 people over the coming six months
Shah flagged off the inaugural Srinagar-Sharjah flight from the Sheikh Ul-Alam international airport here on Saturday, reviving the direct airlink between the valley and the UAE after 11 years.
While one airline will sell 150 unlimited passes to passengers 12 and older, another has sought new streams of revenue by selling its bacon-tomato spaghetti, hamburger steak over rice
New airline ITA takes over; gives itself one year to find partner
Tourists will be allowed on normal flights from November 15. Only single entry 30-day tourist visas will be issued