India's Aviation Sector at Inflection Point, Poised for High-Value Growth

Industry leaders at the International Conference on the Future of Aviation and Aerospace stated that India's aviation sector is at a critical growth juncture. They emphasized the need to shift from assembly to higher-value design, engineering, and maintenance, repair, and overhaul services. The event highlighted deepening India-Europe cooperation, with India becoming a key engineering hub for companies like Airbus. Experts pointed to technology adoption, policy evolution, and workforce development as essential for capturing the sector's vast potential.

Key Points: India's Aerospace Sector at Inflection Point for Future Growth

  • Move beyond assembly to design & lifecycle services
  • Leverage AI and new-age technology for competitiveness
  • Deepen India-Europe aviation partnerships like with Airbus
  • Scale MRO and workforce development for sector integration
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India's aerospace and aviation sector at an inflection point for future growth: Experts

Experts at FOAA conference say India's aviation sector must move beyond assembly to design and MRO leadership, driven by tech and global partnerships.

"India's aerospace and aviation sector is at an inflection point, so the time is right to identify strategic priorities that can shape growth. - Prof. G Shainesh"

New Delhi, April 19

India's aerospace and aviation sector is at an inflection point with huge potential for growth driven by aerospace and defense manufacturing sector in India, and listed technology, particularly AI, global competitiveness, safety and efficiency, experts have said.

Industry leaders and policymakers at the International Conference on Future of Aviation and Aerospace (FOAA) urged collaborative efforts to move beyond assembly to higher‑value design and lifecycle services, stressing resilience and sustainability as the sector scales.

The event was hosted by IIM Bangalore, in partnership with TBS Education, France. Top executives in the sector, entrepreneurs, policy makers, innovators and researchers attended the event.

"India's aerospace and aviation sector is at an inflection point, so the time is right to identify strategic priorities that can shape growth," said Conference Co-chair Prof. G Shainesh, Professor of Marketing & Chairperson of IIMBx, the digital learning arm of IIMB..

Prof. S Raghunath, Conference Co‑chair, asked, Prof. S Raghunath, Conference Co‑chair said advancing design capabilities instead of remaining an assembling giant, leading in the MRO and life cycle intelligence instead of remaining the IT backroom of the world, will be the deciding factors for India to lead the sector.

Speakers said demand and industrial opportunity have converged to spur growth, but warned that policy and regulation must keep pace with innovation.

Annett Baessler, Deputy Consul General, German Consulate General in Bengaluru, pointed to deepening India-Europe ties in aviation, citing the signing of India's MoU with Lufthansa, and the broader momentum in bilateral cooperation.

Highlighting industry linkages, she observed that India has emerged as one of Airbus's largest engineering hubs outside Europe, with the company's footprint spanning commercial, defence, and space operations.

"India has become a key partner for Germany not only on the manufacturing front, but as a rising force in engineering and design", she said.

She also underlined India's order of aircrafts, alongside India's 'Make in India' push, as evidence of the nation's growing, globally competitive capabilities.

Baessler noted that the proposed EU-India Free Trade Agreement could further accelerate cooperation, particularly in areas such as maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO), workforce development and overall sectoral integration.

"Over the last 20 years, Indian aviation has seen exponential growth - across safety, technology, systems, processes, and customer service," said Sunil Bhaskaran, Director - Air India Aviation Academy, Air India Limited.

He highlighted huge room for growth as the density of Indian air travel is still at 1/10th of our population. India's real differentiator, he suggested, will lie in scaling its value chain through new-age technology.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The point about air travel density being 1/10th of the population is staggering. The potential market is enormous. But growth must be sustainable – we can't ignore the environmental impact as we scale up.
P
Priya S
Prof. Raghunath's comment hits the nail on the head. We need to stop being the "IT backroom" and become leaders in lifecycle intelligence. Hope our institutes like IIMB and IITs drive this innovation. The future looks bright!
R
Rohit P
Good to see Germany acknowledging our engineering capabilities. The Airbus engineering hub is a proud achievement. But we must ensure the benefits reach MSMEs and create a robust domestic supply chain, not just serve global giants.
M
Michael C
The warning about policy keeping pace with innovation is critical. Bureaucratic hurdles can stifle growth. Hope the government acts on the FTA with EU to boost MRO and workforce development. Speed is of the essence.
K
Kavya N
While the ambition is great, let's not forget the current challenges: high airfares, airport congestion, and regional connectivity. Growth should be inclusive, making air travel affordable for the common man, not just the urban elite.
V
Vikram M

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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