The news was shared by Mr Pradeep Singh Kharola, Civil Aviation Secretary. He stated that the worst phase is over for the aviation sector. Domestic aviation played an important role during the lockdown caused by the pandemic. A number of repatriation flights were operated to help bring back and drop stranded passengers to their home countries.
Kharola said, "The worst seems to be behind us. Daily passenger numbers are rising, but we will wait till it reaches the mark of 3.85 lakh per day. At that level, the current traffic rate would have reached the per-Covid levels. Only after reaching that mark and seeing a consistency in that trend will we be able to lift the fare and capacity cap".
The Centre also introduced fare bands, which came into effect on May 21, 2020, to boost the number of air travellers. The fare structure was fixed to help travellers and was divided into sections based on travel time and every section had its minimum and maximum fare.
Explaining further, the Secretary said such steps were crucial to protect the aviation industry. “No airline in India went burst and the reason for this is the calibrated way in which the whole process was conducted" he said.