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Tuesday, 5 July 2016

Tata hopes its airlines will find lift from India aviation sector rule changes

Officially at least, Ratan Tata, the patriarch of one of India’s wealthiest business families, retired in late 2012.

In reality, he has been a driving force behind Tata’s bet on airlines and a rare public campaign to open up the booming aviation sector.

The US$100 billion Tata group conglomerate is a major beneficiary of the decision last week to open up aviation in India, making it easier for start-ups to fly overseas sooner.


The decision is no panacea for Tata, whose airlines – Vistara and AirAsia India – have had a slow start in a competitive market dominated by IndiGo, owned by InterGlobe Aviation, and Etihad-backed Jet Airways, both of which opposed the rule change.

But it marks a victory for 78-year-old Ratan Tata, and ends more than two years of airlines lobbying, of Twitter rows and of frequent public statements from the usually circumspect steel-to-salt group.


"This was a David-and-Goliath kind of situation," said a source close to Tata group. "There was huge lobbying from the other side."


Ultimately, sources familiar with the talks said, it was Ratan Tata, a trained pilot, who was key to sealing the deal, capitalising on his clout.

In a message this year, he called for "a new open market economy" and said airlines lobbying against a rule change was "reminiscent of protectionist and monopolistic pressures by vested interests’ entities who seem to fear competition".


A spokesman for Tata Sons, which promotes the group, denied Ratan Tata was directly involved, saying he had "nothing to do with operations or management of either of the airlines" after his retirement, and that views he expressed were personal.
To Read the News in Full 23/06/16 Reuters/The National
Tata hopes its airlines will find lift from India aviation sector rule changes

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