India's SpiceJet could take more of Jet Airways' 737 MAX planes:
chairman
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[October 04, 2019] By
Aditi Shah
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Indian low-cost
carrier SpiceJet Ltd <SPJT.NS> may consider taking some of the Boeing
737 MAX planes that were due to be delivered to now bankrupt Jet Airways
<JET.NS> but are still sitting in Seattle, its chairman said on Friday.
"Lessors are in touch with us for MAX aircraft including those. There is
an opportunity to backfill, to make up for some of the lost time,"
SpiceJet Chairman Ajay Singh told Reuters in an interview in New Delhi
on Friday.
SpiceJet has already agreed to take four Jet 737 MAX planes on the
ground in India, he said. More remain on the ground in Seattle, having
not been delivered due to payment issues or because they were produced
after a global grounding of the 737 MAX fleet in March after two fatal
crashes.
SpiceJet, India's second-largest airline by market share after IndiGo,
has more than 100 of the planes on firm order, as did Jet, but not all
of SpiceJet's planes are ready yet. The grounding of MAX planes has hurt
SpiceJet's capacity expansion and international plans and raised costs,
Singh said.
SpiceJet currently has 13 737 MAX planes grounded in India and another
8-9 are sitting ready in Seattle but will be delivered only once the ban
is lifted, Singh said.
Boeing <BA.N> has said it expects the 737 MAX could return to service in
the United States by the end of the year but Singh said it could take
until January before its planes start flying again as the Indian
regulators would also need to certify it.
BACK-UP PLAN
SpiceJet, which is talking to Boeing about compensation, is also
speaking to Airbus SE <AIR.PA> about potential orders as a back-up plan,
Singh said.
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Ajay Singh, Chairman of Indian low-cost carrier SpiceJet Ltd, speaks
during an interview with Reuters in New Delhi, India October 4,
2019. REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis
He told Bloomberg last month that the airline was weighing an order for 100
Airbus long-range A321 planes.
"It depends on what happens with the MAX. Airbus is telling us they have the
A321 for which there is no Boeing equivalent and we should look at it
independently as well," he said on Friday.
"We are evaluating it," Singh said, adding that he would prefer the MAX because
the company's engineering setup and pilots are already geared for it.
Despite the groundings, SpiceJet has expanded rapidly, taking advantage of Jet's
collapse in April to take up over 30 of its rivals former 737 NG planes, flying
more passengers and raising fares.
In August SpiceJet reported its biggest-ever quarterly profit, and its market
value has soared to $1.2 billion.
SpiceJet has also received some of Jet's domestic and international airport
slots on a temporary basis, but Singh said that as far as he was concerned they
have now become permanent as per aviation rules.
(Reporting by Aditi Shah in New Delhi; Additional reporting by Jamie Freed in
Singapore; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell and Susan Fenton)
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