Defunct
Paramount Airways is working on a revival plan and talking to overseas carriers for investment even as a British court awarded the airline Rs 1,650 crore compensation in a lawsuit.
DGCA had suspended Paramount Airways in April 2010 for its failure to
maintain the mandatory minimum of five aircraft in its fleet.
Paramount, which had an original fleet of five leased aircraft, was operating with a single one at that time as three of its planes were de-registered on account of default in payment.
"Paramount is quite upbeat over the Rs 1,650 crore compensation awarded by a London-based international arbitration court. With this money on the table, the carrier has
initiated its efforts to take to wings again," a source close to the development told PTI.
With the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) giving its nod to the airline to restart operations a couple of months ago, the airline is now in discussion with certain foreign carriers, taking advantage of the recent liberalisation of the foreign direct investment (FDI) policy in aviation.
In all probability, the airline may take off again by the early next financial year, the sources said.
"Paramount promoters recently held preliminary discussions at the board level with some Far-East based carriers and a Gulf-headquartered airline to rope in one of them," the source said, adding one top official of a low-cost carrier held deliberations in Coimbatore to explore investment possibilities.
"However, the airline has not yet decided whether it should relaunch the carrier with the same business model of full-business class or it should go with the trend of no-frills model," the source said.
With inputs from PTI