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'''Druk Air Corporation Limited''' ({{lang-dz|འབྲུག་མཁའ་འགྲུལ་ལས་འཛིན།}}, [[Wylie transliteration|Wylie]]: '' 'brug mkha' 'grul las 'dzin''), [[operating as]] '''Drukair&nbsp;— Royal Bhutan Airlines''', is the [[national airline]] of the [[Kingdom of Bhutan]] and has its headquarters in the western [[dzongkhag]] of [[Paro District|Paro]].<ref>"[http://www.drukair.com.bt/contactus.php Contact Us]." Druk Air. Retrieved on 8 October 2009.</ref><ref>"[http://www.drukair.com.bt/reservation.php Reservation Offices for Drukair at various cities]." Druk Air. Retrieved on 8 October 2009.</ref> operates a modest scheduled flight network within the [[South Asia]]n region from its [[airline hub|base]] at [[Paro Airport]].
'''Druk Air Corporation Limited''' ({{lang-dz|འབྲུག་མཁའ་འགྲུལ་ལས་འཛིན།}}, [[Wylie transliteration|Wylie]]: '' 'brug mkha' 'grul las 'dzin''), [[operating as]] '''Drukair&nbsp;— Royal Bhutan Airlines''', is the [[national airline]] of the [[Kingdom of Bhutan]] and operates a modest scheduled flight network within the [[South Asia]]n region from its [[airline hub|base]] at [[Paro Airport]] in the western [[dzongkhag]] of [[Paro District|Paro]].


Taking its name from [[Druk]], the [[airline]] was founded in 1981, ten years after [[Druk Gyalpo]] [[Jigme Dorji Wangchuck|His Majesty King Jigme Dorji Wangchuck]] gradually began to open up the Kingdom from [[History_of_Bhutan#Emergence_from_isolation|self-imposed isolation]], and seven years after welcoming its first foreign visitors. As the [[monopoly|only]] airline flying into Bhutan, Druk Air has become a [[lifeline]] with the outside world for the [[Demographics of Bhutan|Bhutanese people]], as well as supporting emerging inbound [[Tourism in Bhutan|tourism]] and export markets.
Taking its name from [[Druk]], the [[airline]] was founded in 1981, ten years after [[Druk Gyalpo]] [[Jigme Dorji Wangchuck|His Majesty King Jigme Dorji Wangchuck]] gradually began to open up the Kingdom from [[History_of_Bhutan#Emergence_from_isolation|self-imposed isolation]], and seven years after welcoming its first foreign visitors. As the [[monopoly|only]] airline flying into Bhutan, Druk Air has become a [[lifeline]] with the outside world for the [[Demographics of Bhutan|Bhutanese people]], as well as supporting emerging inbound [[Tourism in Bhutan|tourism]] and export markets.
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On 11 November 1995, Druk Air introduced an inflight magazine, ''Tashi Delek''.<ref name="25years"/>
On 11 November 1995, Druk Air introduced an inflight magazine, ''Tashi Delek''.<ref name="25years"/>

In the 1990s the airline was headquartered in [[Thimpu]].<ref>"World Airline Directory." ''Flight Global''. 1-7 April 1998. [http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1998/1998%20-%200850.html?search=%22Druk%20Air%22 58].</ref>


Service to [[Yangon]], the capital of [[Myanmar]], began on 6 January 1997.<ref>{{cite news
Service to [[Yangon]], the capital of [[Myanmar]], began on 6 January 1997.<ref>{{cite news

Revision as of 17:59, 18 November 2009

Drukair — Royal Bhutan Airlines
འབྲུག་མཁའ་འགྲུལ་ལས་འཛིན།
File:Drukair logo.jpg
IATA ICAO Call sign
KB DRK[1] ROYAL BHUTAN[1]
Founded5 April 1981
Commenced operations11 February 1983
Operating basesParo Airport
Fleet size2
Destinations8
Parent companyDruk Holding and Investments Limited
HeadquartersParo, Bhutan
Key peopleTandin Jamso (MD)[2]
Websitewww.drukair.com.bt

Druk Air Corporation Limited (Template:Lang-dz, Wylie: 'brug mkha' 'grul las 'dzin), operating as Drukair — Royal Bhutan Airlines, is the national airline of the Kingdom of Bhutan and operates a modest scheduled flight network within the South Asian region from its base at Paro Airport in the western dzongkhag of Paro.

Taking its name from Druk, the airline was founded in 1981, ten years after Druk Gyalpo His Majesty King Jigme Dorji Wangchuck gradually began to open up the Kingdom from self-imposed isolation, and seven years after welcoming its first foreign visitors. As the only airline flying into Bhutan, Druk Air has become a lifeline with the outside world for the Bhutanese people, as well as supporting emerging inbound tourism and export markets.

History

In 1968[3] the Indian Border Roads Organisation built an airstrip in the Paro valley, which was initially utilised for on call helicopter operations by the Indian Armed Forces for the Royal Government of Bhutan. After consideration by King Jigme Singye Wangchuck and the Tshogdu, Druk Air was established by Royal Charter on 5 April 1981, [4] ten years after Druk Gyalpo His Majesty King Jigme Dorji Wangchuck gradually began to open up the Kingdom from self-imposed isolation, and seven years after welcoming its first foreign visitors.[5]

Paro Airport with a Druk Air BAe 146 on the apron

Paro Airport is located deep in a valley 2,235 metres (7,333 ft) above sea level, and is surrounded by mountains as high as 4,900 metres (16,100 ft),[6] with a runway at the time which was 1,200 metres (3,900 ft) in length,[4] given which the Bhutanese government had specific requirements for a choice of aircraft to be operated. They required an 18–20 seat STOL-capable aircraft with operating capabilities which included a high service ceiling, high rate of climb and high manoeuvrability. The major requirement for the aircraft was that it must be capable of flying KolkataParoKolkata, a 1,200 kilometres (750 mi) round-trip flight, without refuelling, due to minimal infrastructure being available at Paro for this purpose. Three different aircraft types were considered after flight tests in India and Bhutan between 1978 and 1980, however, none were deemed to be suitable.[4]

In mid–1981, the Indian government set up a committee to study its own requirements for a Light Transport Aircraft. Based upon this competition, the Bhutanese government ordered one Dornier 228-200 for delivery in January 1983, with the option for a second aircraft for delivery in late 1983. The first 18-seat Dornier 228-200 landed at Paro Airport on 14 January 1983, the exact time of landing, the number of passengers on board and even the direction the aircraft was parked on the airport apron being predetermined by the high lama of Paro Dzong.[4]

The airline inaugurated scheduled revenue flights on 11 February 1983, with Flight 101 departing Paro for Kolkata and returning the next day as Flight 102. For the first four weeks the flight was operated three times a week, after which it was increased to a daily flight.[4] At the time of service commencement, Paro Airport consisted of the runway, a two-room air traffic control building (with the ground floor acting as the check-in counter) and a departure lounge on the lawn.[7] Prior to the establishment of the Department of Civil Aviation in January 1986, the airline was responsible for the operation and maintenance of airport infrastructure.[8] The airline commenced flights to Dhaka in Bangladesh on 30 October 1986.[9][10]

Summary of Druk Air services between 1983 and 1987[11]
1983 1984 1985 1986 1987
Passengers flown 2,854 4,480 5,928 7,776 8,700
Distance flown ('000 km) 64 125 125 205 n/a
Revenue passenger kilometres ('000 km) 1,612 2,531 3,349 4,381 n/a

Jet Era

File:Druk Air old logo.png
Druk Air logo used until the introduction of the Airbus A319

On 31 December 1987, a US$25 million[12] order was placed with British Aerospace for a BAe 146-100 STOL regional jet.[13] The purchase of the aircraft was financed by the government obtaining, for the first time in the country's history, a commercial loan.[14]

In 1988, the operational base was shifted from Kolkata to Paro Airport.[9] On 21 November 1988, the BAe 146 was delivered to Paro Airport. With the introduction of the BAe 146, Druk Air was able to widen its network to link Paro with Delhi on 26 November 1988, Bangkok on 28 January 1989 and Kathmandu in April 1989.[10] Druk Air also hired its first seven flight attendants in 1988 who were trained by Thai Airways International.[9] In the first full year of operational service with the BAe 146, the airline achieved an average load factor of 50–60 percent, more than the 40 percent which was expected,[15] carrying 12,732 over the 1989–1990 period.[10] In 1990,[16] the runway at Paro Airport was lengthened from 1,400 metres (4,600 ft) to 2,000 metres (6,600 ft) and reinforced for heavier aircraft,[9] and a hangar was also constructed for the aircraft, which was funded by the Indian government as part of the Paro Airport Development Project.[3]

Druk Air flights between Kathmandu and Paro afford passengers a close aerial encounter with Mount Everest[17]

The airlines only aircraft was requisitioned by Druk Gyalpo Jigme Singye Wangchuck on 9 November 1990 in order to allow the King and his party to travel to Tokyo for the coronation of Akihito as Emperor of Japan.[18] From Japan, the King then travelled to Malé in the Maldives for the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation summit between 21 November–23 November, and returned to Bhutan in order for the aircraft to re-enter service with the airline on 25 November.[18] Due to a requirement stipulated by the Bhutanese government that all foreign tourists, with the exception of Indian nationals, enter and leave Bhutan by air,[5] the country's tourism industry was brought to a halt, which saw the airline paying hefty penalties to disgruntled tour operators.[18] This problem was somewhat alleviated when a second BAe 146 entered service in 1992,[19] and on 11 November 1993, the airline introduced a 10 Executive Class on the aircraft.[9]

On 11 November 1995, Druk Air introduced an inflight magazine, Tashi Delek.[9]

Service to Yangon, the capital of Myanmar, began on 6 January 1997.[20]

On 13 May 1991, Druk Air was registered under the Companies Act of Bhutan.[9]

Druk Air became the launch customer for the Avro RJX-85 in April 2000 when it placed an order with BAE Systems for two aircraft, with deliveries initially scheduled to take place in November 2001 and January 2002.[21] Delays in the first flight and certification of the RJX pushed back expected delivery to Druk Air to after April 2002. [22] BAe Systems cancelled the RJX program in November 2002,[23] due to receiving orders from only two airlines,[24] Druk Air and British European.[23] With British European threatening legal action to enforce their contract with BAe Systems,[25] the aircraft manufacturer offered to fulfill the contract for Druk Air, although airline management decided against acquiring the aircraft, citing potential problems with sourcing spare parts for the aircraft in future.[24]

In order to find a replacement for the 2 BAe 146s, Druk Air management fielded submissions from Airbus, Boeing and Embraer to determine their products suitability to meet Druk Air's stringent operational requirements. Bombardier was also invited by management to demonstrate the CRJ900 regional jet,[26] however, the airline was advised by Bombardier the aircraft would be unsuited for operations at Paro.[27] In February 2002, the Airbus A319 became the largest aircraft to ever land at Paro Airport, when Airbus demonstrated the aircraft to the airline. By October, Boeing had withdrawn from the competition due to not being able to source an aircraft to demonstrate to the airline. With the Embraer E-190 yet to fly, it was expected that Druk Air would order the A319, however, the government had concerns regarding financing for the purchase, and in October the final decision was delayed.[28] After a short period of time, the government instructed management to begin evaluations once again,[27] and a Boeing 737-700 conducted eleven test flights at Paro Airport in February 2003 in which it was demonstrated it met the requirements of the airline for operation into Paro.[29]

Airbus signed a memorandum of understanding with Druk Air in July 2003 for two 114-seat[30] Airbus A319-115, powered by two CFM56-5B engines,[31] for delivery in the second half of 2004.[32] The purchase of the two jets, valued at Nu. 3,534.36 million,[12] was the biggest single purchase ever made by Bhutan, and was largely responsible for a 250 percent increase in the Bhutanese trade deficit over the previous year for the financial year 2004–2005.[33][34] The Bhutanese government issued Nu. 1,767.18 million in government bonds to pay for one aircraft[12] and for only the second time in Bhutan's history intended to seek a commercial loan for the other aircraft,[14] however, in October 2004 it announced it would instead seek a soft loan for this purpose.[12]

On 11 November 2003, the birthday of Druk Gyalpo Jigme Singye Wangchuck, Druk air initiated services to Gaya, India.[35] Bodh Gaya, 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) from Gaya, is the site of the Mahabodhi Temple where Siddhārtha Gautama, the Buddha, reached enlightenment, and 30,000–40,000 Bhutanese make the pilgrimage every year.[36] Pilgrims have previously made the pilgrimage to Bodh Gaya via a 2-3 day overland trip from the Bhutanese border town of Phuntsholing, and Druk Air management plans on acquiring 20-30% of this traffic,[35][36] although the airline has yet to record a profit on the route.[37] The following month, as a result of Royal Bhutan Army efforts to expel from Bhutan territory Indian separatist insurgent groups, notably the United Liberation Front of Asom and the National Democratic Front of Bodoland,[38] flights to Dhaka were suspended from 29 December[39] in order to prevent insurgents from using Druk Air flights to escape to alleged hideouts in Bangladesh.[40]

Airbus era

Passengers disembarking from Druk Air's Airbus A319 at Paro Airport

The first Airbus A319 arrived in Bhutan on 19 October 2004;[30] the date chosen after a Buddhist astrologist was consulted to ensure the aircraft arrived in Bhutan on an auspicious day in the Buddhist calendar.[12] Before entering service on commercial flights on 31 October 2004,[41] Druk Air took their A319 on a country-wide flight in honour of the ascencion of Crown Prince Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck to the Chhoetse Penlop.[12] The second aircraft was delivered by Airbus to Druk Air in December 2004.[42]

In July 2005, the governments of India and Bhutan signed a new Air Services Agreement which increased the allowable number of weekly flights between the two countries from twelve to forty-nine. In addition to destinations already served by Druk Air, the cities of Mumbai, Chennai and Guwahati were included in the Air Services Agreement, with Bhutan being granted fifth freedom rights from several Indian cities to onward destinations such as Yangon, Dhaka and Singapore.[43][44]

Domestic helicopter service was inaugurated in November 2005,[45] inline with a resolution by the Council of Ministers in April 2001 which stated that domestic services should be introduced. Thirty heliports across the country were identified, and the introduction of services saw, for example, the 550 kilometres (340 mi) trip from Thimphu to Trashigang taking only one hour, instead of two–three days.[46] The Eurocopter Ecureuil helicopter operated by the Nepalese operator, Air Dynasty, had by January 2006 seen 30 hours of service, netting Druk Air US$3,000 in profits.[45]

Flights to Dhaka, suspended since 29 December 2003, resumed on 23 October 2006,[47] and the airline was given rights to fly to Chittagong and Cox's Bazar by the Bangladeshi authorities.[48] The airline announced plans in July 2007 to start scheduled flights to Mumbai via Kathmandu from March 2008,[49] inline with the strategy of Druk Air management to increase the number of Indian tourists travelling to Bhutan during the low season months of June–August and November–February.[50] These plans were put on hold in March 2008, due to Paro Airport not being able to handle night flights and the airline only being able to secure landing slots at Mumbai's Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport at 3am.[50] Plans for services to Hong Kong, Singapore, Abu Dhabi, Dubai and Sharjah were also shelved.[50]

The airline posted its first profit in 2007 of Nu 31.15 million.[51] The two BAe 146 aircraft were sold to Star Perú in October 2007 for a reported US$3.3 million,[52] and left Bhutan for Peru in November and December 2007.[53]

Airbus A319 at Paro Airport

Druk Gyalpo Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck on 11 November 2007 issued a Royal Kasho establishing Druk Holding and Investments Limited, a holding company which would manage existing and future investments of the Royal Bhutanese government. As a result, seven government-owned companies, including Druk Air, had their ownership transferred from the Ministry of Finance to the newly-formed holding company.[54][55] Incorporated on 13 November 2007, Druk Holding and Investments announced in December 2007 that given Bhutan's tourism industry being reliant on Druk Air, the head of the government agency overseeing tourism development in Bhutan would become the chairperson of Druk Air, and would be responsible for improving the performance of the national airline.[56][57]

In March 2008, Druk Air introduced a new uniform for its flight attendants, consisting of a contemporary kira and tego.[58] The uniforms were introduced for the centenary celebrations of the monarchy in Bhutan and the airlines own silver jubilee,[19] and was chosen by way of a competition in which five Bhutanese fashion designers submitted entries, with the winning entry receiving a Nu. 75,000 prize.[58] The textile was chosen by way of a competition jointly organised by Druk Air and the United Nations Development Programme to promote the Bhutanese textile industry and culture of Bhutan.[59][60]

Although the government of Bhutan goes to great lengths to prevent outside influences from intruding on Bhutanese culture, Druk Air is not immune to problems which affect the airline industry and the world community at large. In June 2008, citing hikes in the price of oil and the need to contain operational costs, the airline reduced frequencies across its network and announced an increase in airfares to offset the increased costs, whilst taking advantage of the lower cost of jet fuel at Delhi, Kolkata and Bangkok airports.[61] Due to its small network which is reliant on fifth-freedom rights[62], Druk Air regularly leases its aircraft to other airlines, such as Myanmar Airways International, Indian Airlines and Bangkok Airways in order to keep utilisation rates on its aircraft higher than they would under normal circumstances, whilst at the same time earning extra revenue.[62][63][64][65]

The airline was due to begin flights on 20 April 2009 to Bagdogra Airport in India, but had to delay the inaugural flight to the lack of immigration and customs facilities at the airport.[66] The inaugural flight to Bagdogra Airport left Paro Airport on 18 June 2009, with the ceremony being attended by S. M. Krishna, the Indian Minister for External Affairs, and Lyonpo Ugyen Tshering, the Bhutanese Minister of Foreign Affairs, making Druk Air the first international airline to operate into the airport.[67]

Into the future

As the only airline flying into Bhutan, Druk Air is a lifeline with the outside world for the Bhutanese people,[62] also supports emerging inbound tourism and export markets.[68][69][70] The airline has in recent times been criticised for its unreliability, particularly from the Bhutanese tourism industry which is still in its infancy, and regards the very company upon which it relies as its biggest threat.[68]

In October 2009, the Bhutanese government will begin construction works of an airstrip in Yonphula. The airstrip, which is expected to be 1,200 metres (3,900 ft) in length and operational by March 2010, will allow for service by small aircraft in the 15–16 seat category.[71] The airstrip, which is being financed with Nu. 34 million from the budget which was previously allocated to the development of domestic helicopter service, would only be operational in the morning hours due to high winds in the afternoon making safe operations risky.[72] Druk Air is conducting a feasibility study into operating services into the airstrip Paro, and two other airstrips which are under consideration for construction in Bumthang and Bathpalathang.[72]

The Indian government is conducting a feasibility study for the Bhutanese government into the viability of an international airport near the southern Bhutanese town of Gelephu.[43] In the tenth five-year plan, which covers 2008–2013, the amount of Nu. 2,826 million has been allocated by the Bhutan government for development of the airport as per the master plan.[73] A preliminary survey was conducted by the Indians in May 2006 and the survey team from the Airports Authority of India was to return to complete the final survey in September, however, after repeated requests from the Bhutanese the surveying team has yet to return, thereby delaying any potential development of the all-weather airport.[49]

The airline has announced its intention to join the International Air Transport Association in 2009.[74]

Destinations

Druk Air operates scheduled flights to the following destinations:[75]

Druk Air destinations
Country City Airport
Bhutan
Bhutan Paro Paro Airport
Asia
Bangladesh Dhaka Zia International Airport
India Delhi Indira Gandhi International Airport
Gaya Gaya Airport
Kolkata Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose International Airport
Siliguri Bagdogra Airport
Nepal Kathmandu Tribhuvan International Airport
Thailand Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Airport

Fleet

The Druk Air fleet consists of the following aircraft:[76]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b International Civil Aviation Organisation (2008). "Designators for aircraft operating services, aeronautical authorities and services" (Edition No. 143). International Civil Aviation Organisation: 1–38. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  2. ^ "You ask, We answer". Bhutan Observer. 30 June 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-15.
  3. ^ a b Zimba, Dasho Yeshey. "Three Decades of Planned Development". In Ramakant and Misra, Ramesh Chandra (ed.). Bhutan: Society and Polity (2nd edition ed.). Indus Publishing. pp. 177–178. ISBN 8173870446. Retrieved 2008-04-10. {{cite book}}: |edition= has extra text (help); External link in |chapterurl= (help); Unknown parameter |chapterurl= ignored (|chapter-url= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ a b c d e Christ, Rolf F. (June 1983). "Bhutan puts its flag on the world's air map". ICAO Journal. 38 (6). Montreal, Canada: International Civil Aviation Organization: 11–13. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
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  55. ^ Pelden, Sonam (19 January 2008). "Royal command to consolidate government holdings". Bhutan Observer. Retrieved 2008-07-16.
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