Nepali Times
Nation
Nepal by air



MIN RATNA BAJRACHARYA
International airlines flying into landlocked Nepal intersect with the two most important aspects of Nepal's economy: tourism and migrant labour. Yet, prolonged political instability has resulted in a lack of strategic planning to encourage international airlines and support the national carrier.

Tourist arrival by air between January to June was up by 20 per cent from 2011, and is expected to total 800,000 this year. The number of overseas workers will hit 450,000 this year, with more than 200,000 going to Qatar and Malaysia alone. Travel and tourism contributed four per cent of total GDP in 2011, and this is forecast to rise to 4.7 per cent in 2012, mainly because of the growth in Nepal's aviation sector.

Since Nepal has only one international air gateway, streamlining procedures at the airport, making it attractive for new international airlines to fly to Nepal, as well as removing infrastructure bottlenecks should be government priorities. But it doesn't seem to be.

Landing and navigation charges in Kathmandu are 30 per cent higher than other airports in the region, but the facilities offered are not up to par. Ground handling is largely a monopoly of Nepal Airlines, and international operators say they are forced to use its expensive and shoddy service. The international airport is a national disgrace, with mismanagement, rude staff, and huge queues. Frequent media exposes have made the airport synonymous with corruption.

PICS: TRISHNA RANA
HIGH FLIERS: Heads of airline companies and travel agencies discuss the problems facing Nepal's aviation industry and ways forward at a roundtable organised by Himalmedia on Tuesday afternoon.
International airlines, which have seen their profit margins erode with heavy fuel charges, bear the added burden of their planes being put on long holds due to traffic congestion or poor visibility at Kathmandu. The litany of woes is long, and many of them are caused by political interference, neglect, poor coordination, and apathy. The state of the airport and the national airline reflects the general state of the country.

With the mirage of a new international airport receding, aviation experts say the economic importance of Kathmandu airport will only increase in the years ahead. Representatives of international airlines based in Kathmandu say they see tremendous potential for growth if some of the structural challenges to do with safety and infrastructure can be dealt with.

"The market is not growing very rapidly, but it is relatively good, there is enough potential for organic growth," says Ramdas Shivram of Qatar Airways, which carries the highest volume of passengers to Kathmandu with four daily flights from Doha. This week, it started using RNP-AR, a new navigation system to make precision approaches that will reduce delays and diversions due to poor visibility at Kathmandu airport in winter, and ensure more safety. This project initiative is undertaken by the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal (CAAN) in coordination with the Airbus Industrie subsidiary, Quovadis, and Qatar Airways.

Chantosh Srinilta, the manager of Thai International, which has been operating continuously to Kathmandu for 45 years, sees potential for even more growth in tourist traffic to Nepal. "We would like to share our experiences to promote Nepal through roadshows and travel marts to increase tourist traffic," Srinilta said at the 'Nepal By Air' roundtable on the airline industry on Tuesday organised by Nepali Times.

There are now 28 international airlines connecting Kathmandu to rest of the world, and two new airlines, including Turkish, are expected to start operations soon. However, Kathmandu is running out of landing slots especially in winter when the airport is open only from midday, as the fog lifts, till midnight.

CAAN has informed airlines that Kathmandu will be open for 24-hour operations from 28 October, but there is skepticism about whether this will really happen. Noise issues at night can be addressed if current departure procedures can be changed to take planes away from built-up areas. The airport also has a parking problem, with only nine bays. The interval between international arrivals at present is 10 minutes because the taxiways do not reach the ends of the runway, and there are still two years to go for runway upgrading.

Samir Chada, the representative of Jet Airways which operates two daily flights to Delhi and one to Mumbai, agrees that there are bottlenecks for expansion. "There are 28 airlines already here, so obviously there are huge opportunities for growth," Chada says, "but if the infrastructure, costs, and pricing issues can be resolved we can see even more flights."

Renji Thomas of Gulf Air agrees, and says his airline would add to the 14 flights a week it operates if the charges and taxes were reduced. "Even though business has grown, the bottom line is in the red because of costs," Thomas explained.

Indeed, current government policy seems to be to squeeze every cent out of passengers and airlines in taxes and charges, whereas the strategy should be to encourage more tourists so that they spend more and there is a multiplier in the economy.

For this there has to be paradigm shift in aviation policy, and a strategy to boost passengers. Joy Dewan of Zenith Travels, which handles Spicejet and Bahrain Air in Kathmandu, agrees. A major concern for the government should be how to attract more carriers and retain the existing ones with consistent policies and rational pricing, he says.

Airlines have been paying taxes even on the taxes of ticket sales, and are lobbying to make it fare-based. "The airlines need to justify their operations in Nepal, we should not be pricing ourselves out of the market," Dewan told the 'Nepal By Air' roundtable.

WHAT'S WRONG HOW TO FIX IT
No more landing slots Allow 24-hour operation
Traffic congestion Upgrade taxiways and apron
Weather delays Improve navigation system
Expensive ground handling Allow private providers
Expensive landing charges Reduce to international norms
Poor condition of terminal Improve, privatise, management
Immigration and security lines Train and streamline

Airlines are not satisfied with the price and quality of ground handling (which includes check-in, baggage delivery, bus ferry from terminal to plane) that Nepal Airlines provides to most operators. But the carrier is reluctant to let go because ground handling charges alone make up 18 per cent of the annual revenue of Nepal Airlines. There is a push to deregulate ground handling, allow competition, bring down costs, and improve service. However, an initiative to hand over the management of Kathmandu airport to an Indian company was put off because of a nationalist hue and cry.

"Cost is a factor, but for us it is not as important as the quality of ground handling, the service level has to go up," says Pawana Shrestha of Etihad Airways.

Thai, which has always done its own ground services, is facing a KFC-type union issue, and says the government should revise the labour act and implement it strictly. Most airline operators say that the authorities tend to see airlines as a cash cow, and don't realise that they have to work on very slim margins.

"From the outside it looks like a really glamorous business, but we are in a very drastic situation, fuel costs and handling charges means the yield is down," says Bhola Thapa of President Travels, which handles Malaysia Airlines and Indigo.

Nepal's national airline is plagued by the same problems the airport is. Its share of international traffic has now gone down to five per cent because of government interference in its plans to increase and modernise its fleet. "The country's economic growth is tied up with the state of its national airline," admits Nepal Airlines' Commercial Director, Madan Kharel, "we have to regain the position of being the main carrier of tourists and Nepali workers."

Travel trade executives say improving the management of the state-run airport and airline, and making them more efficient would be a big boost to Nepal's economy by making air travel to and from Nepal easier.

BK Singh of Everest Express which handles Silk Air recounts what passengers often say when they arrive here: "I know I have landed in Kathmandu airport, I can smell it."

Read also:
Jet set go

A safer sky, VIJAY LAMA
An airline captain suggests immediate steps to minimise the dangers of flying in Nepal

Disastrous disaster management, ANDY JOSHY
Post-accident crisis management is almost non-existent in Nepal

Destination Dasain
With 28 international airlines operating in Nepal, choices are large for customers this Dasain



1. Rajesh Pilot
One problem no one has addressed is the millions of dollars airlines operating Kathmandu (domestic and international) lose very year because of being forced to hold for hours due to poor visibility. This is worse in winter because of the inversion effect, but the smog is getting worse every year. Looking at the smoke-belching vehicles at Tinkune and the brick factory smoke stacks right on approach this is no surprise. So in addition to controlling birds, how about controlling the pollution in Kathmandu?

2. Krishna S.
It's clear that Kathmandu Airport cannot handle any additional traffic especially during the fog ridden months of winter and early spring. Apart from improvising the existing VOR-DME letdown approach to a more accommodating R-NAV approach, nothing much can be done to reduce the landing minimums, to reduce delays and bring in more flights. Fogs will not go away! 
Here's  something that can be done without the pipedream of a billion dollar new international airport. 
Extend the Landing Distance Available of either Biratnagar or Bhairawa by few thousand feet, install an ILS landing system, and redirect some of the migrant labour gulf flights to these terai towns.
Build Pokhara International Airport. As a tourist, I'd rather fly directly into Pokhara and look at those looming macchpuchre and Annapurna immediately after I land. That would take some load off Kathmandu with less tourist flights.


3. Bob
You can't expect a world-class airport when you have third-class governance in a country. An airport reflects the state of the country and how efficiently and honestly it is ruled. The article is right, TIA is a hotbed of sleaze that is why it is so dirty.

4. Jagdish
Bob, you are only half right. We have a third class governance because it is run by third class people. We have all those people trained and educated in America, Europe, Australia and other countries. But they are all third class people in the first class seat. It starts with our Planning Commission. And the fault squarely lies with donor governments as well. Why did you offer them scholarships when you knew it well that there is no hope for them to come back and do well. 
Quite frankly, I have no iota of hope and trust left on our Nepal Airlines. It has been used and abused by our politicians and its unapt staff alike. It must go into liquidation first.
Everytime I see an official or a staff from the Airport or NA, I feel like telling them what a looser they are as a flag bearer and flag carrier of the national shame.
Anyone paying attention? NO. Baburam is busy talking and Prachanda is counting his money. Truth is that the competence and atttude of Jhalnath, Madhav Kumar, Sushil, Ramchandra and Deuba are below the level of the Nepal Airlines and airport staff. 
 


5. bhaje
the KTM hub potential is like the unlimited income from mega-tera-giga-watts of Nepal's famed hydel potential, an old farce. BTW, Kunda Dixit must know, who had a -joke- column in Rising Nepal, few years back (sorry, bhaje is old, many years back), and -rightly- saw the hype in such things (and the not-so-holy motives behind the hype).

It's not sort of a personnal attack, but if KD thinks press people have some -social?, political? - responsability, KD has to read (or check?) what NT publishes now, and he must remember what he wrote or read in same or sister publications 5, 10 or 25 years back ... (ah, the  people-oriented Himal).

In short, KTM airport is already BEYOND CAPACITY - and this is not news, since around 1995,  with no room for improvement.

1 - KTM airstrip is small, short, with NO PHYSICAL POSSIBILITY to enlarge, it has a dangerous approach, the (towering) hills around make improvements impossible
- plus it has to deal with 3 very different type ot aircraft movement =
- helicopters
- domestic flights using typically small crafts
- jets (but not the largest ones - 747 were a no-no in KTM)

There is of course no way to increase the physical aispace around TIA, limited by high hills, except by diminishing the time allowed for take-off or landing without going well under accepted levels of security.
Please understand that a Twin Otter takes actually as much airspace as an A340 or B777
TIA is since years BEYOND acceptable levels of security - somewhere in a foggy 2000 morning, I noted some 40 take-offs in one-and-and half hour or so ... with the first Mountain-flights already returning ... call that jammed, with less than up-to-date equipment (not to mention the tower's staff).

2 - impossible to refuel in KTM - guess why? kerosene has to come by trucks from India.
Do you know how many trucks needed for wide-bodied aircraft to take off? this is where the engines suck half of the fuel (and gracefully throw the fumes back to the Valley - oh, well, yes, airports are terribly polluting).
Not to mention quality ... Jet A1 + 10 % water? - I saw few years back what was sold as Jet A1 for helicopters, that is = expensive and unsafe.

Actually helicopters can fly on so-so fuels - with a lowered exhaust and cleaning costs afterwards, airliners can't.

3 - as for ground service, this is a sour joke - TIA cannot even provide safe water even at tremendous cost. Usual racket, please check KD's complete works,nthat was already true by 1985.

The late Harkha Gurung summed it up long ago, move the capital city and airport in Terai. Feasible by 1970, not any more. I guess all (or at least relevant parts) of his works still available in any decent bookstore.

Then, you guys in NT, please dig in the archives, or ask KD for the old jokes is reycling these days (I should have acopy of "Funny Sides Up" home, I can scan it , it KD lost his').

As for Pokhara, as a site for larger aircrafts, it's even worst than KTM, mountains are closer.

Krishna S writes:
" As a tourist, I'd rather fly directly into Pokhara and look at those looming macchpuchre and Annapurna immediately after I land"
Chances are more that they will fly straight into Maccchapure ... which is awfully close for a jet awfully close - 20 miles, less than 3 minutes' flight from Pokhara ...
Add ground conditions in Pokhara, can reach 40 Celsius in may, no way to take off (even for small planes)  ...

Back to TIA, 24/24 operations is criminal (starting from noise), the whole blabla boils down to "privatize", that is, even worst service, for even more money (see railways in England).






LATEST ISSUE
638
(11 JAN 2013 - 17 JAN 2013)


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