Kingfisher Airlines

Kingfisher Airlines
IATA
IT
ICAO
KFR
Callsign
KINGFISHER
Founded 2003
Commenced operations 9 May 2005
Ceased operations
  • Oct 2012 (flights suspended)
  • Feb 2013 (licence revoked)
Hubs
Secondary hubs
Focus cities
Frequent-flyer program King Club
Airport lounge Kingfisher Lounge
Subsidiaries Kingfisher Xpress
Fleet size 6
Destinations 25
Company slogan Fly The Good Times
Parent company United Breweries Group
Headquarters The Qube, Mumbai, Maharashtra[1][2]
Key people
  • Vijay Mallya (CMD)
  • Sanjay Aggarwal (CEO)(quit on 17 Feb 2014)
  • Prem Kumar Amritnagar (EVP)
Revenue INR58.15 billion (US$920 million) (2012)
Net income INR-23.28 billion (US$−370 million) (2012)
Employees 5,696 (2012)
Website flykingfisher.com (now defunct)

Kingfisher Airlines Limited was an airline group based in India. Its head office was in Andheri (East), Mumbai and registered office in UB City, Bengaluru. Kingfisher Airlines, through its parent company United Breweries Group, had a 50% stake in low-cost carrier Kingfisher Red. Until December 2011, Kingfisher Airlines had the second largest share in India's domestic air travel market. However, the airline had been facing financial issues for many years,[3] and due to a severe financial crisis faced by the airline at the beginning of 2012, this share dropped to the lowest in the market in April 2012.[4][5]

The airline had shut down its operations and locked out its employees for several days when on 20 October 2012 the DGCA suspended its flight certificate. The suspension resulted from the airline's failure to give an effective response to the show-cause notice issued by the DGCA. On 25 October 2012, its employees agreed to return to work.[6] However, in February 2013 the Indian government announced the withdrawal of both domestic and international flight entitlements allocated to the airline.[7] The CEO quit on 17 February 2014.[8]

History

Kingfisher Airlines was established in 2003. It is owned by the Bengaluru based United Breweries Group. The airline started commercial operations in 9 May 2005 with a fleet of four new Airbus A320-200s operating a flight from Mumbai to Delhi.[9] It started its international operations on 3 September 2008 by connecting Bengaluru with London. Kingfisher's head office is located in The Qube in Andheri (East), Mumbai and its registered office is located in UB City, Bengaluru.[10][11] Its head office was previously in the Kingfisher House in Vile Parle (East), Mumbai.[12] In 2012 Vijay Mallya was trying to sell the Vile Parle Kingfisher House.[13] With the freezing of the bank accounts of the airline by the Indian Income Tax Department, the airline entered a period of financial unrest.[14]

In September 2011, the chairman and managing director of Kingfisher Airlines made following disclosure to the Bombay Stock Exchange(BSE); "The Company has incurred substantial losses and its net worth has been eroded. However, having regard to improvement in the economic sentiment, rationalization measures adopted by the Company, fleet recovery and the implementation of the debt recast package with the lenders and promoters including conversion of debt into share capital, these interim financial statements have been prepared on the basis that the Company is a going concern and that no adjustments are required to the carrying value of assets and liabilities"[15] This filing was widely covered by Indian and international print and electronic media and analysts. It was stated by analysts and media that the company needed capital infusion to remain viable and this has pushed shares to near historic lows.[16] Kingfisher Airlines Lenders later stated that they consider that company is viable.[17] On 15 November 2011 the airline released poor financial results, indicating that it was "drowning in high-interest debt and losing money". Mallya indicated that his solution was for the government to reduce fuel and other taxes. The government was engaged in assessing whether to bail out the company and other airlines or let market forces determine which ones survive.[18]

A closed counter after Kingfisher Airlines stopped its service

Ever since the airline commenced operations in 2005, it reported losses. After acquiring Air Deccan, Kingfisher suffered a loss of over INR10 billion (US$160 million) for three consecutive years. By early 2012, the airline accumulated losses of over INR70 billion (US$1.1 billion) with half of its fleet grounded and several members of its staff going on strike. Kingfisher's position in top Indian airlines on the basis of market share had slipped to last from 2 because of the crisis. In December 2011, for the second time in two months, Kingfisher's bank accounts were frozen by the Mumbai Income Tax department for non-payment of dues. Kingfisher Airlines owes INR70 crore (US$11 million) to the service tax department.[19] Indian tax body also stated that Kingfisher Airlines is delinquent[20] On 20 October 2012, Kingfisher's licence was suspended by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation after it failed to address the Indian regulator's concerns about its operations.[21] On 25 February 2013, its international flying rights and domestic slots were scrapped by the Indian aviation authorities.[22]

In July 2014, Kingfisher Airlines has appeared as the country's top NPA after it has failed to repay loans of over Rs 4,000 crore borrowed mainly from state-owned banks.[23]

Destinations

As of 10 April 2012, Kingfisher Airlines served 25 domestic destinations within India. It had suspended all international operations from 10 April 2012 with the final flight between London Heathrow and Delhi.[24] When the airline is flying, all routes are now operated with the Airbus A320 family, ATR 42s and ATR 72 aircraft. Its first long haul destination was London, England, which was launched in September 2008. It had plans to launch new long haul flights to cities in Africa, Asia, Europe, North America and Oceania with deliveries of new aircraft. All long haul routes used to be operated on the Airbus A330-200.

Codeshare agreement

Prior to the suspension from IATA, Kingfisher had codeshare agreements with:

Fleet

Airbus A320-200 taxiing at HAL Airport, Bengaluru
A Kingfisher ATR -72 at Bhavnagar Airport

Kingfisher Airlines' fleet mainly consisted of ATR 42, ATR 72 and Airbus A320 family aircraft for domestic and short haul services and Airbus A330-200s for international long-haul services. The average age of its fleet as of January 2009 was 2.3 years. All ATR's and a few aircraft from the A320 family were used for Kingfisher Red service. Up until March 2012, Kingfisher Airlines had the following fleet with the following orders:

Kingfisher Airlines Fleet[27]
Aircraft Total Orders Options Passengers Notes
P Y Total
Airbus A319-100 3 0 144 144 All dry-leased
Airbus A320-200 10 (67) 20 114 134 11 dry-leased
Deliveries were throughout up until 2016
3 0 174 174
8 0 180 180
Airbus A321-200 6 32 119 151 2 dry leased
2 0 199 199
Airbus A350-800 (5) TBA Orders cancelled by Airbus
Airbus A380-800 (5) (5) 0 0 800 Orders cancelled by Airbus
ATR 42–500 2 0 48 48 All dry leased
ATR 72–500 17 20 0 66 66
8 0 72 72
Total 64 (77) 25

Services

Cabin

Domestic

Economy class meal on board a Kingfisher Airlines domestic flight
Kingfisher First

The domestic Kingfisher First seats have a 48 inch seat pitch and a 126-degree seat recline. There are laptop and mobile phone chargers on every seat. Passengers can avail of the latest international newspapers and magazines. There is also a steam ironing service on board Kingfisher First cabins. Every seat is equipped with a personalised IFE system with AVOD which offers a wide range of Hollywood and Bollywood movies, English and Hindi TV programmes, 16 live TV channels and 10 channels of Kingfisher Radio. Passengers also get BOSE noise cancellation headphones. Domestic Kingfisher First is only available on selected Airbus A320 family aircraft.

Kingfisher Class

The domestic Kingfisher Class has 32-34 inch seat pitch. Every seat is equipped with personal IFE systems with AVOD on board the Airbus A320 family aircraft. As in Kingfisher First, passengers can access movies, English and Hindi TV programmes, a few live TV channels powered by DishTV, and Kingfisher Radio. The screen is controlled by a controller-console on the seat armrest. Earcup headphones are provided free of cost to all passengers. The default channel shows, alternating every few seconds, the aeroplane's ground speed, outside temperature, altitude, distance and time to destination, the position of the aircraft on a graphical map, and one or more advertisements. Passengers are served meals on most flights. Before take-off, passengers are served bottled lemonade.

Kingfisher Red
Main article: Kingfisher Red
Kingfisher Red's logo

Kingfisher Airlines acquired Bangalore based low cost carrier Air Deccan in 2007,[28] changed its name to Simplifly Deccan and subsequently converted it to Kingfisher Red, Kingfisher Airline's low-cost class on domestic routes. A special edition of Cine Blitz magazine was the only reading material provided. Passengers could earn King Miles even when they flew Kingfisher Red, which they could redeem for free tickets to travel on Kingfisher Airlines or partner airlines. On 28 September 2011, Vijay Mallya announced that the company would soon stop operations of Kingfisher Red as it did not believe in low-cost operations any longer.[29][30]

International

Kingfisher First

Prior to losing its A330 fleet, Kingfisher offered an international business/first product called Kingfisher First which featured full flat-bed seats with a 180-degree recline, with a seat pitch of 78 inches, and a seat width of 20-24.54 inches.[31] Passengers were given Merino wool blankets, a Salvatore Ferragamo toiletry kit, a pyjama to change into, five-course meals and alcoholic beverages. Also available were in-seat massagers, chargers and USB connectors. Every Kingfisher First seat had a 17 inch widescreen personal television with AVOD touchscreen controls and offers 357 hours of programming content spread over 36 channels, including Hollywood and Bollywood movies along with 16 channels of live TV, so passengers can watch their favorite TV programmes live. There was also a collection of interactive games, a jukebox with customisable playlists and Kingfisher Radio. Passengers are given BOSE noise cancellation headphones. The service on board the Kingfisher First cabins included a social area comprising a full-fledged bar staffed with a bartender, a break-out seating area just nearby fitted with two couches and bar stools, a full-fledged chef on board the aircraft and any-time dining. A turn-down service included the conversion of the seat into a fully flat bed and an air-hostess making the bed when the passenger is ready to sleep. Both Kingfisher First and Kingfisher classes featured mood lighting on the Airbus A330-200 with light schemes corresponding to the time of day and flight position.

Kingfisher Class

The international Kingfisher Class (no longer available since Kingfisher lost its A330 long-haul fleet) seats offered a seat pitch of 34 inches, a seat width of 18 inches and a seat recline of 25 degrees (6 inches). Passengers received full length modacrylic blankets, full size pillows and meals. Each Kingfisher Class seat had a 10.6 inch widescreen personal television with AVOD touchscreen controls. The IFE was similar to that of the international Kingfisher First class. It could also be controlled by a detachable remote-control console fitted in the armrest. This device could be used to control the IFE, reading-lights, play games and even has a credit-card swipe for shopping on Kingfisher's 'Air Boutique'. It also had a facility for sending text-messages, though the service wasn't provided by Kingfisher.

In-flight entertainment

Kingfisher's IFE system is the Thales TopSeries i3000/i4000 on board the Airbus A320 family aircraft, and Thales TopSeries i5000 on board the Airbus A330 family aircraft provided by the France-based Thales Group.[32] Kingfisher was the first Indian airline to have in-flight entertainment (IFE) systems on every seat even on domestic flights. All passengers were given a "welcome kit" consisting of goodies such as a pen, facial tissue and headphones to use with the IFE system. Now, passengers of Kingfisher class are not given "welcome kits" but, as mentioned earlier, a complimentary bottle of lemonade and earphones for use with the IFE are still given. The inflight magazines are special editions of magazines owned by Mallya's media publishing house (VJM Media) viz. Hi! Blitz for domestic flights and Hi! Living for international flights. Initially, passengers were able to watch only recorded TV programming on the IFE system, but later an alliance was formed with Dish TV to provide live TV in-flight.[33] And in a marked departure from tradition, Kingfisher Airlines decided to have an on-screen safety demonstration using the IFE system, however the conventional safety briefing by the flight attendants still existed on many flights.

King Club

The frequent-flyer program of Kingfisher Airlines is called the King Club in which members earn King Miles every time they fly with Kingfisher or its partner airlines, hotels, car rental, finance and lifestyle businesses. There are four levels in the scheme: Red, Silver, Gold and Platinum levels. Members can redeem points for over a number of schemes. Platinum, Gold and Silver members enjoy access to the Kingfisher Lounge, priority check-in, excess baggage allowance, bonus miles, and 3 Kingfisher First upgrade vouchers for Gold membership. Platinum members get 5 upgrade vouchers.

Cargo

Kingfisher Xpress
Further information: Kingfisher Xpress

Kingfisher Xpress was a Door-to-Door cargo delivery service from Kingfisher Airlines. Kingfisher Xpress same day service will be India's first and only same day delivery by air service. The service offered a pick up facility in the 8 main metropolitan cities of India namely Mumbai, New Delhi, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Chennai, Ahmedabad, Cochin and Kolkata with guaranteed[34] same day delivery in up to 22 cities[35] of India namely Ahmedabad, Bagdogra, Bangalore, Chennai, Coimbatore, Delhi, Kochi, Goa, Guwahati, Hyderabad, Indore, Jaipur, Kolkata, Mumbai, Patna, Raipur, Ranchi, Lucknow, Nagpur, Pune, Srinagar and Tiruvanathapuram.[36]

Kingfisher Lounge

Kingfisher Lounges are offered to Kingfisher First passengers, along with King Club Silver and King Club Gold members. Lounges were located in:

Awards and achievements

Adrian Sutil is pursued by Lewis Hamilton at the 2010 Malaysian GP. Kingfisher is a sponsor of Force India

According to Kingfisher[37]

Accidents and incidents


See also

References

  1. "Airline Membership". IATA.
  2. "KFA Office". KFA.
  3. India Today, Kingfisher in trouble: Vijay Mallya refuses to accept his business model is to be blamed for crisis, 19 November 2011, retrieved 4 December 2011
  4. "Kingfisher Airlines's market share lowest in country - The Times of India". The Times of India.
  5. Govt suspends Kingfisher Airlines' licence | Reuters. In.reuters.com. Retrieved on 23 December 2013.
  6. "Kingfisher Airlines staff agree to resume work". Reuters. Retrieved 25 October 2012.
  7. "Kingfisher Fails to Renew License Causing Withdrawal of Flights". India Internal Flights.com.
  8. Kingfisher Airlines CEO Sanjay Aggarwal quits. Livemint (17 February 2014). Retrieved on 21 May 2014.
  9. "Kingfisher Airlines to take wings on May 9". Dancewithshadows.com. 9 May 2005. Retrieved 30 August 2010.
  10. "." Kingfisher Airlines. Retrieved on 12 January 2012. "Kingfisher Airlines Limited Kingfisher Airlines Limited The Qube, C.T.S. No. 1498 A/2, 4th Floor, M.V. Road, Marol, Andheri (East), Mumbai - 400 059 India "
  11. ENS Economic Bureau. "Jet, Kingfisher trying to fly in formation." Indian Express. Tuesday 14 October 2008. Retrieved on 25 August 2009.
  12. "Contact Us." Kingfisher Airlines. Retrieved on 25 August 2009. "Kingfisher Airlines Limited Kingfisher House Western Express Highway Vile Parle (E) Mumbai - 400099 India "
  13. "Kingfisher house, Gandhi relics up for sale?" Mid Day. 12 March 2012. Retrieved on 15 March 2012.
  14. "Financial Results".
  15. "Going concern".
  16. "Reuters News". 15 September 2011.
  17. Chowdhury, Anirban; Choudhury, Santanu (15 September 2011). "Lenders Confirmation". The Wall Street Journal.
  18. Niles, Russ (15 November 2011). "Indian Airlines In Crisis". AVweb. Retrieved 17 November 2011.
  19. "Bank Account frozen".
  20. Choudhury, Santanu (9 December 2011). "Kingfisher Airlines delinquent". The Wall Street Journal.
  21. Ministry to give Kingfisher local slots, global flying rights to other carriers
  22. "Mallya’s Kingfisher Airlines is king of defaulters at Rs 4,022 crore". Patrika Group (17 July 2014). Retrieved 17 July 2014.
  23. "India's Kingfisher Airlines ends overseas flights". BBC News. 10 April 2012.
  24. "Kingfisher Airlines and American Airlines enter into Codeshare Agreement". Kingfisher Airlines official website. 23 November 2010. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  25. PR-IT code share
  26. "Kingfisher Airlines Fleet". Flykingfisher.com. 15 August 2010. Retrieved 30 August 2010.
  27. "Kingfisher buys control of Air Deccan". Times of India. 1 June 2007. Retrieved 20 August 2012.
  28. "Kingfisher to exit low-cost airline operation". CNN IBN. 28 September 2011. Retrieved 28 September 2011.
  29. "Vijay Mallya grounds low-cost carrier Kingfisher Red". NDTV. 28 September 2011. Retrieved 28 September 2011.
  30. Skytrax News. "Kingfisher Airlines unveiled new Airbus A330-200 designed to take the customer experience to the highest quality level". Airlinequality.com. Retrieved 30 August 2010.
  31. Ravi Teja Sharma / New Delhi 5 October 2006 (5 October 2006). "Airborne again: IFE systems". Business-standard.com. Retrieved 30 August 2010.
  32. "Kingfisher partners with Dish TV". Techtree.com. 9 December 2006. Retrieved 30 August 2010.
  33. "Kingfisher’s new ‘Xpress’ cargo service". Routesonline. 29 January 2010. Retrieved 8 September 2010.
  34. "Kingfisher cargo service from February 2 - Money - DNA". Dnaindia.com. 30 January 2010. Retrieved 8 September 2010.
  35. "Tamil Nadu / Coimbatore News : Kingfisher Xpress cargo service from February 2". The Hindu. 1 February 2010. Retrieved 8 September 2010.
  36. "Achievements and Awards". Flykingfisher.com. Retrieved 30 August 2010.
  37. "Accident description". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 11 November 2009.
  38. "Report on Serious Incident to M/S Kingfisher Airlines ATR-72 Aircraft VT-KAC at Mumbai on 10.11.2009." (PDF). Directorate General of Civil Aviation. Retrieved 25 November 2010.

External links

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