Naresh
Chandra Committee Report on the Civil Aviation Sector
The
Naresh Chandra Committee ("Committee") submitted its report to
the Ministry of Civil Aviation on December 8, 2003, suggesting dramatic
changes to revitalize the Indian civil aviation sector focusing on privatization,
encouraging foreign investment, affordability, viability and safety. The
Committee was set up to look into the bottlenecks and problems plaguing
the aviation sector. Some of the salient recommendations of the Committee
are as follows:
Foreign equity
investment for foreign individuals and companies pertaining to both
domestic and international scheduled air transport services should be
further liberalized to allow upto 49 percent. Investment by foreign
airlines should be allowed upto 49 percent with the approval of the
Foreign Investment Promotion Board. In all other air services, i.e.,
non-scheduled services such as helicopter operations, foreign investment,
including investment by foreign airlines, should be allowed upto 100
percent.
Liberalization
of the international air transport segment to be pursued in a phased
manner. In the first phase, private airlines based in India should be
allowed to provide international air transport services to and from
India. In the next phase, India should actively pursue the objective
of complete liberalization of the international air transport segment
through (a) seeking more liberal arrangements under the bilaterals;
and (b) enhancing full-access to wider market segments by joining a
regional or a plurilateral group of countries with a similar agenda
of liberalization.
Further liberalization
of air-chartered services, specifically, the Committee recommends relaxation
of restrictions pertaining to frequency and foreign ownership norms
for chartered operators. In addition, tourist charters should be allowed
to take Indian Passport holders on board and also to carry a mix of
foreign and Indian passengers on domestic tourist circuits.
Removal of requirements
regarding fleet size and equity capital to enable easier entry into
the aviation sector · Immediate measures to reduce system costs of the
civil aviation sector, including allowing airlines to source Aviation
Turbine Fuel ("ATF") from the supplier of their choice, improving
co-ordination with other ministries such as home affairs and defence.
Airport charges
to be brought down to rates comparable with neighboring South East Asian
states and Gulf countries.
-
Lower
excise duty and sales tax on ATF and abolish import duty and sales
tax on AVGAS (fuel for trainer aircraft at flying clubs). Other aviation
related taxes and fees such as Inland Air Travel Tax, Foreign Travel
Tax and Passenger Service Fee maybe replaced with a single lower ad
valorem sector-specific cess, at 5 percent of the airfare. Further,
there should be parity in taxes on ATF and reduction in route navigation
and landing charges for aircrafts with certified maximum seating capacity
of less than 80.
Liberalized airports
should be allowed to come up irrespective of proximity to existing airports.
However the state and central governments should refrain from offering
concessions and subsidies to these airports.
Abolition of route
dispersal guidelines in the domestic travel segment. Simultaneously
the government should set up a non-lapsable Essential Air Services Fund
to provide explicit subsidy support, congruent with the quantum of funds
available, to essential but uneconomical services, including commercially
unviable airports.
-
Privatization
of the national carriers - Indian Airlines and Air India - along with
the airports in India. In the case of the former, it is recommended
that a consortium of domestic financial institutions and foreign institutional
investors be created, who would hold the shares of the two national
carriers. In the case of the latter, relaxation of the qualification
criteria for bidding so as to broaden the number of competent bidders
has been proposed.
-
Disinvestment
of Pawan Hans Helicopters Limited, the State-owned helicopter charter
service provider, by inducting a strategic partner and, thereafter,
go in for an Initial Public Offer.
- Privatisation of
existing airports and private sector participation in Greenfield projects.
Due to increased
privatization and the potential abuse of monopoly power by the airport
operators, the responsibility of ensuring appropriate levels of regulation
should be vested with the proposed Aviation Economic Regulatory Authority
("AERA").
-
Safety
regulation of Air Traffic Control Corporation ("ATC Corporation")
should be under the purview of the Directorate General of Civil Aviation.
In order to contain potential abuse of monopoly power, the ATC Corporation
should also be regulated by the proposed AERA.
Segments of airports
and ATC services, which have natural monopoly or "common user/carrier"
characteristics, should be subjected to independent economic regulation
by the proposed AERA. The Committee also suggests that the AERA should
use a light-handed approach such as multi-year price-cap regulation.
In line with this, the Committee recommends establishment of AERA as
a single-member entity, supported by appropriate technical staff. As
the sector develops, the regulator should gradually withdraw from supervision
and cede oversight of anti-competitive practices to the Competition
Commission of India.
Source: Ministry
of Civil Aviation
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