Mumbai airport’s flight record shows surge in India air travel

epa05072623 Air India airlines aircraft are parked at the Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai, India, 17 December 2015. According to reports, an Air India technician died after being sucked into the engine of a running aircraft at Mumbai airport.  EPA/DIVYAKANT SOLANKI

Bloomberg

Rising incomes and cheaper fares offered by budget carriers are fueling air travel in India, an aviation market set to be the third biggest behind China and the US.
In signs traffic is surging, Mumbai on November 24 handled 969 flights in a
24-hour period, a world record for an airport that operates only one runway at any given point of time, the Times of India reported, citing an official at the Mumbai International Airport Ltd. The aim is to reach 1,000 aircraft movements, the official told the newspaper.
Indian carriers flew about 100 million domestic passengers last year, and the
International Air Transport Association estimates the market will add about
337 million more in the next two
decades. About 97 percent of India’s 1.3 billion people have never been on an airplane, according to low-cost airline SpiceJet Ltd., indicating the potential for growth in traffic.
Mumbai’s airport, which has two runways, can operate only one at a time because they criss-cross each other, with lack of land ruling out the construction of one more. As a result, it is technically a single-runway facility. The surge in traffic was also aided by private and charter
aircraft, the newspaper said.

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