With increased congestion and cut-throat competition on metro routes, airlines are ramping up their services to smaller destinations. Kingfisher, for instance, added 90 new flights to non-metro destinations in 2007. Arch rival Jet Airways operates 44 daily flights to mini-metros.
Vijay Mallya's budget carrier, Simplifly Deccan, was the pioneer in picking up and dropping passengers from small towns and cities. It added five more mini-metros to its network last year. The airline connected destinations such as Silchar and Aizwal in the north east and gave the industrial town of Jamshedpur its first air connectivity. After launching its first flight to the steel city in August, it added another in October.
"On the long haul flights to metros, it is difficult to always garner load factors. On the other hand, short haul routes are good in terms of margins," said Ramki Sundaram, chief financial officer and acting CEO for Deccan, adding: "But short haul routes have to be well thought out in terms of traffic density and extent of competition."
The growth is also reflected in overall numbers. While the share of metros in total passenger traffic slipped from 15 per cent in 2006-07 to 14 per cent in 2007-08, the share of mini-metros improved from 1.66 per cent to 1.73