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Air India warns of crew crunch and soaring costs as West Asia conflict lengthens flights
Business
Published on 24 April 2026

Longer routes are squeezing both fuel and staffing
Air India says West Asia tensions are forcing airlines to reroute and fly longer to Europe and the US, pushing up fuel bills. The extra flight time is also straining cockpit and cabin staffing, with crew availability tightening. To protect on-time operations, airlines are cutting some frequencies, while geopolitical uncertainty is dampening long-haul and US-bound leisure demand.
- West Asia conflict is lengthening flights to Europe and the US
- Rising durations are driving higher fuel costs for airlines
- Cockpit and cabin crew shortages are emerging from scheduling pressure
- Airlines are cutting frequencies as long-haul demand softens
Read the full story at The Economic Times
This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on
The Economic Times
