The minister issued the instructions during a meeting with airline executives to discuss the sharp rise in spot fares in the past few weeks.
At the Monday’s meeting, officials of the Directorate General of Civil Aviation shared their analysis on the rise in airfares, especially on routes like Leh, Goa and Ahmedabad that were among the top destinations for Go First. The airline filed for voluntary insolvency on May 2 and stopped flying. “A mechanism for ensuring reasonable pricing within the high RBDs (Reservation Booking Designator) may be devised by airlines. This shall be monitored by the DGCA,” the civil aviation ministry said in a press statement.
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Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia asks airlines to “self-monitor” fares on routes that have seen considerable surge -
A mechanism for ensuring reasonable pricing within high RBDs (Reservation Booking Designator) may be devised by airlines, ministry says -
Airlines have also been told to curb prices on routes that see high demand due to calamities
When domestic operations resumed in May 2020 after two months of nationwide lockdown in view of the Covid-19 pandemic, the civil aviation ministry had capped the number of flights that airlines could fly and fares that they could charge. The fare caps were removed last August.
Go First temporarily halted its operations on May 2 following a cash crunch caused by the grounding of 28 of its aircraft. The airline was operating around 200 flights daily carrying 25,000-30,000 passengers before its grounding. Go First’s top five routes included Delhi-Srinagar, Delhi-Leh, Delhi-Mumbai, Mumbai-Goa, and Delhi-Pune.
There were no immediate comments from airlines, but airline executives said on condition of anonymity that they would comply with the instruction.
“We are getting slots on an ad hoc basis for 15-30 days as Go First has stopped flights and we would like to have them for at least for three months. On routes like Srinagar and Leh, flights get easily filled up. On other routes, we need a longer sales window to get good passenger load,” another executive said

