This Article is From Sep 05, 2018

Top Official Rubbishes Air Tickets Costing Rs 60,000 To Flood-Hit Kerala

"Ninety per cent tickets sold at less than Rs 10,000 which was an informal ceiling set (by authorities) and airlines cooperated," he told reporters on the sidelines of the International Aviation Summit in Delhi.

Advertisement
Kerala News

Kerala's Kochi Airport was shut between August 15 and August 29 due to floods in the state

New Delhi:

Civil Aviation Secretary RN Choubey, on Tuesday, said that 90 per cent of tickets on flights to and from flood-affected Kerala were sold below Rs 10,000, dismissing the charge that airlines had hiked fares exorbitantly.

"Ninety per cent tickets sold at less than Rs 10,000 which was an informal ceiling set (by authorities) and airlines cooperated," he told reporters on the sidelines of the International Aviation Summit in Delhi.

He said the fares were in economy class and for direct flights to the state.

He also took on those who sought to mislead the general public by putting up screenshots which claimed the airfares had touched Rs 60,000 on social media.

These fares, he said, were not for direct flights to and from Kerala.

Advertisement

Kerala witnessed its worst flood in a century last month, which claimed the lives of hundreds of people and rendered thousands homeless.

Meanwhile, participating at a plenary discussion at the event he made it clear that India was finding it "difficult" to commit to International Civil Aviation Organization's Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA) requirements.

Advertisement

The scheme is aimed at curbing the aviation industry's carbon dioxide footprint worldwide and from January 1 next year, commercial operators must measure and report the fuel use and emissions of all international flights.

Voicing strong objection to framing regulations which differ from region to region, he said, "There cannot be patchwork solutions to environmental regulation."

Advertisement

He also said that India has not yet reached the level attained by mature aviation markets. "Therefore, the main issue for negotiation is what should be the baseline and the reference to which we should regulate ourselves. We are having difficulty in accepting the benchmark level being sought to be imposed upon us," he said.
 

Advertisement