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India Navigates Soaring Jet Fuel to Protect Air Travel
16 Mar
Summary
- Government explores mechanisms to shield airlines from rising jet fuel prices.
- Airlines face increased operating costs due to longer flight routes.
- India's jet fuel pricing is linked to the 'Mean of Platts Arab Gulf' benchmark.

India is actively addressing the challenge of spiraling jet fuel prices, driven by the escalating conflict in West Asia. The civil aviation ministry is consulting with the petroleum ministry and oil marketing companies to prevent these costs from immediately impacting airfares on April 1. Jet fuel prices, linked to the 'Mean of Platts Arab Gulf' benchmark, have seen significant increases, directly affecting airline operating expenses, which constitute about 26% of their costs.
Airlines are absorbing higher expenses due to rerouting flights and increased insurance premiums for war risk coverage. Some carriers are forced to take longer routes, adding substantial costs for narrow-body and wide-body aircraft. This situation impacts the viability of operations, particularly in West Asia, where flights are being limited for evacuations.
To mitigate the impact, Indian airlines have proposed a domestic pricing model detached from international price volatility. The government is exploring a mechanism to spread carriage costs over a longer period. However, taxes like excise duty and VAT, levied as a percentage of fuel price, further inflate costs for carriers. Despite imposing fuel surcharges, airlines are cautious about raising ticket prices too high for fear of damaging demand, emphasizing that ticket pricing is directly correlated with supply and demand.




