India plans to open 100 airports in five years

India plans to open 100 airports in five years

India is planning to open 100 additional airports by 2024, as part of a plan to revive economic grow..

India is planning to open 100 additional airports by 2024, as part of a plan to revive economic growth in Asias third-largest economy, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
The proposal, which includes starting 1,000 new routes connecting smaller towns and villages, was discussed at a meeting last week to review infrastructure needed by 2025, the people said, asking not to be identified as the discussion is private. Steps to start a plane-lease financing business in the country was also discussed, they said.
With economic activity at a six-year low and prospects of further slowdown looming, Prime Minister Narendra Modi is keen to double down on infrastructure projects in a bid to revive growth and achieve a target of making India a $5 trillion economy by 2025. Last month, the government cut corporate tax rates, putting India on par with some of the lowest in Asia, to help compete with the likes of Vietnam and Indonesia for investments amid global trade tensions.
Indias plans to expedite airport development still trails that of Chinas, which has set a goal of having 450 commercial airports by 2035, almost double the number at the end of 2018. A spokesman at the civil aviation ministry was not immediately available for a comment.
The proposal also includes boosting the number of locally trained pilots to 600 a year and double the domestic aircraft fleet to 1,200 during the period, the people said.
The government has committed investments of Rs 1 trillion to build airports in the next 5 years.
Just three years back, only 75 of Indias 450 runways were functional, as airlines avoided flying to smaller, World War-era airstrips in smaller towns. But Modis subsidy programme, which partly funds airline losses while capping fares on remote routes, has helped add as many as 38 airports to the nations aviation map at the start of this year, while contracts were given to airlines to start flights to a further 63 airports with no or limited connectivity.
While the lure of India — with an emerging middle class flying for Read More – Source

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