The question remains, will the India airports presently served by Lufthansa be ready to handle the 500+ seater jumbo aircraft like A-380s? "We hope the New Delhi airport may be first to upgrade itself to the demands of handling such huge aircraft, going by the schedule of the ongoing expansion work there in view of the Commonwealth Games 2010," he said.
Hilgers, who took over as the head of Lufthansa's south Asia operations in January, last year, was on his maiden visit to Pune to announce a change in the Pune-Frankfurt flight pattern besides holding interactions with representatives of the Indo-German Chamber of Commerce and key German corporates like auto major Volkswagen.
As of now, Lufthansa operates flights to seven Indian destinations__New Delhi, Mumbai, Pune, Hyderabad, Bangalore, Chennai and Kolkata__with a frequency of 52 flights for the ongoing winter schedule of the airliners. "We plan to increase the frequency to 53 flights in the forthcoming summer schedule, starting end of March, by reintroducing daily flight service between Bangalore and Frankfurt. The service was earlier curtailed to six days a week," he said.
Times of India
