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Jet Airways to Resume Flying by September in Fierce India Market

Jet Airways got its flying licence from the Directorate General of Civil Aviation after successful proving flights over two days earlier this week.

Jet Airways to Resume Flying by September in Fierce India Market
Jet Airways to Resume Flying by September in Fierce India Market

Jet Airways India Ltd., the erstwhile bankrupt carrier undergoing a court-monitored resolution, is expecting to return to the skies in the quarter to September as competition in India’s cutthroat air travel market intensifies with new entrants.

Jet Airways got its flying license from the Directorate General of Civil Aviation after successful proving flights -- or test flights with aviation regulator officials on board -- over two days earlier this week, the airline said in a statement Friday. The flying permit validated the airline’s operational readiness, marking its revival in a “new avatar with fresh funding, changed ownership, and new management,” according to the statement. 

Jet Airways will unveil its plans for fleet, network, a loyalty program and the overall product in the coming weeks, according to the statement. The carrier will also announce its senior management next week and begin hiring for operational roles with former Jet Airways staff getting preference, it said in the statement. 

The comeback of Jet Airways, which folded up under mounting debt in 2019 and entered a reformed insolvency resolution process, is a milestone for India’s bankruptcy laws. However, Jet’s revival will come at a cost for lenders, who will recoup only 5% of what they are owed. 

The new owners -- Dubai-based, Indian-origin businessman Murari Lal Jalan and Florian Fritsch, the chairman of London-based financial advisory and alternative asset manager Kalrock Capital Management Ltd. -- have pledged to make investments of as much as $120 million, Chief Executive Officer Sanjiv Kapoor said last month. 

Jet Airways is entering India’s notoriously tough market, which is set to become more crowded with billionaire Rakesh Jhunjhunwala-owned Akasa Air preparing to fly later this year. It will also face stiff competition from the Tata Group’s growing aviation empire that now constitutes three airlines -- Air India Ltd., Singapore Airlines Ltd.’s local joint venture Vistara and AirAsia India. Another hurdle will be tackling crushing fare wars and high costs, which have put other Indian airlines out of business. 

The airline is planning to return with a hybrid of premium and low-cost services, Kapoor said last month. It will have a two-class configuration where business class passengers will be offered services including free meals, while economy class flyers will pay for meals and other services, he said.

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