Air India in record order for new planes

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Air India has ordered 470 new aircraft – a record for the aviation industry – as the carrier pushes to become bigger global player.

Chairman N Chandrasekaran said the airline had its sights set on becoming “a world-class proposition”.

He said the orders from Europe’s Airbus and US-based Boeing would modernise the airline’s fleet and help it to “dramatically” expand its network.

The first aircraft will go into service at the end of this year.

“Air India is on a large transformation journey,” Mr Chandrasekaran said in a statement announcing the deals. “This order is an important step in realising Air India’s ambition… to offer a world-class proposition serving global travellers with an Indian heart.”

The orders come less than two years after the Indian government sold the airline to Tata Group, India’s largest conglomerate, which had founded the company in 1932.

Nationalised in 1953, the airline long preserved a reputation for being a top-tier carrier, with customers that included George Harrison and The Doors.

But competition ramped up in the 1990s and the firm started racking up losses after its 2007 merger with the state-owned domestic operator, Indian Airlines.

The company lost ground to rivals, such as Emirates, Qatar Airways, Etihad and other Middle Eastern carriers, which now handle much of the overseas travel to and from India.

These orders could change that, said aviation analyst Mark Martin, but the airline will face the challenge of rapidly modernising its operations, including software, maintenance and its system for the new aircraft.

“If they are successful, they will take India’s uniqueness to the globe once again, after many years,” Mr Martin said.

Air India said it was looking to Airbus to supply 250 planes, and Boeing for another 220 jets – a major boost for two companies that had seen commercial business drop sharply when travel slowed during the Covid pandemic.

French President Emmanuel Macron and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi appeared with the company in a press conference announcing the Airbus deal.

Mr Modi later wrote on Twitter that the orders reflected a “robust” relationship between India and France and would strengthen his country’s aviation industry.

Separately, US President Joe Biden hailed the “historic” Boeing order as a sign of a “deepening partnership” between the two countries, and one that would support more than a million jobs in the US.

UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak also said the orders would help create 450 jobs in the UK, since the engines will be supplied by Rolls-Royce.

“By building trade ties with growing economic powers like India we will ensure UK businesses remain at the forefront of global growth and innovation,” he said in a statement.