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Archive: February 1, 2026

Dylect Fuels Foundational Learning by distributing curriculum books to 400 Children in Vrindavan

New Delhi, Feb 01st: Dylect, one of India’s fastest-growing lifestyle tech brands, has distributed around 4000 curriculum books to 400 students from Nursery to 5th standard at Sandipani Muni School FFLV in Vrindavan, Uttar Pradesh, as part of its ongoing CSR initiative. The comprehensive book distribution covers all subjects required in their curriculum, ensuring underprivileged children gain access to quality educational materials for foundational learning and academic excellence.

Sandipani Muni School FFLV provides free education, nutritious meals, transportation, and long-term academic support to underprivileged students, building on its mission to empower young learners from nursery to Grade 12. These books eliminate barriers to learning by providing personalised resources, fostering early literacy, numeracy, and subject knowledge in a structured manner. This initiative supports the school’s holistic approach, enabling students to build strong basics and prepare for advanced studies, including digital and tech-driven opportunities.

Expressing gratitude for the initiative, Rupa Raghunath DasFounder of Sandipani Muni School FFLV, said “For many of our children, access to structured curriculum books is the first step towards consistent and confident learning. Dylect’s support strengthens our classroom delivery and allows students to practise, revise, and build concepts independently. This contribution directly supports our goal of creating strong academic foundations for children from underserved backgrounds.”

A student shared their excitement: “Earlier, we shared books or waited for teachers to explain everything in class. Now I have my own books for every subject, so I can study again at home and understand lessons better. It makes me feel more confident in class.”

Speaking about the initiative, Anuj Bhatia, Founder of Dylect, said, “At Dylect, we believe access to the right learning resources at an early stage can shape a child’s academic journey. By providing curriculum books, we aim to support structured learning in classrooms and help students build strong fundamentals, especially for children who may not otherwise have access to such resources.”

Dylect remains committed to partnering with education-focused organizations like Sandipani Muni School FFLV, reinforcing inclusive growth and brighter futures for India’s young generation.

UK-India Academic Ties Strengthened at Manipal University Visit

Manipal, Feb 1: Mr Chandru Iyer, His Majesty’s Deputy High Commissioner to Karnataka & Kerala and Deputy Trade Commissioner for Investment in South Asia, visited Manipal Academy of Higher Education an Institution of Eminence Deemed to be University, on Friday, 30 January 2026. The visit aimed to strengthen academic, research, and innovation collaborations between India and the United Kingdom.

Welcoming the delegation, Lt. Gen. M. D. Venkatesh, VSM Vice Chancellor, MAHE, shared an overview of MAHE’s academic programmes, research strengths, and international engagement. He highlighted key areas of cooperation with the UK, including science and technology, healthcare, innovation, and higher education.

Speaking on the occasion, Dr Venkatesh said,

“MAHE has consistently built strong global partnerships that combine academic excellence, research, and social relevance. The United Kingdom is an important strategic partner for us, especially in advanced research, innovation, healthcare, and technology.”

During the interaction, Mr Chandru Iyer shared perspectives on the evolving landscape of international partnerships between India and the UK. He engaged in detailed discussions on potential avenues for collaboration with UK universities, research institutions, and industry partners, underscoring the importance of sustained academic and innovation linkages in addressing global challenges.

The meeting was attended by Ms Leena Paul, Senior Investment Adviser, and Mr Chethan G. M., Inward Investment Adviser, from the British Deputy High Commission, Bengaluru, along with Mr Rory Picardo, Head-Technology, Education, Innovation, and Skills, Department for Business and Trade. Senior leadership from MAHE who attended the meeting included Dr Narayana Sabhahit, Pro Vice Chancellor-Technology & Science; Dr P. Giridhar Kini, Registrar; and Dr Anup Naha, Director- International Collaborations.

Murshidabad Heritage Festival 2026: Reliving Royal Grandeur from 6th–8th Feb

Kolkata, Feb 1: Once the Nawabi Capital of Bengal and a cradle of power, prosperity and culture, Murshidabad is not merely a place in the map – it is a living inheritance. Its palaces, river ghats, silk looms and age-old rituals continue to echo stories whispered by the Ganga. From 6th to 8th February 2026, this historic place of legacy will relive its grandeur through the Murshidabad Heritage Festival 2026, organized by the Murshidabad Heritage Developments Society .

Set against the majestic presence of KATGOLA GARDEN and Palace, aristocratic kothis, ancient mosques, temples and riverfronts, the three-day festival is a celebration of heritage, aristocracy, art, food and living traditions that once made Murshidabad one of the richest cultural centres in the world. 

The festival offers an immersive journey into the elegant lifestyle of Murshidabad’s Nawabi and mercantile past where culture was cultivated with grace, food was elevated to art and architecture reflected power tempered with aesthetic sophistication. Curated heritage walks, palace visits, film screening, boat rides and evenings of music recreate the rhythm of an era that continues to resonate through time. Attendees will explore iconic sites such as Hazarduari Palace, Katra Mosque, Nashipur Rajbari, Kathgola Palace, Bari Kothi, Jain Kothi, Jagat Seth Museum and the historic lanes of Tantipara, all while the Ganga flows alongside as Murshidabad’s eternal witness.

Cultural engagements such as film screening on legendary figures like Rani Bhawani, traditional boat races at Azimganj, tea party on the river, Ganga Arti, fireworks and musical evenings bring together moments of emotion, celebration and reflection. 

A defining highlight of the festival is its tribute to Murshidabad’s culinary heritage from refined Sheherwali household recipes once served in the kitchens to beloved local street food enjoyed along the ghats. Guests will dine at the heritage hotels such as the House of Sheherwali, Bari Kothi and Kathgola, where gastronomy seamlessly blends with history.

The festival also places a spotlight on Tantipara, the legendary hub of Murshidabad silk. Renowned for its exquisite Murshidabadi silk sarees, intricate weaving techniques and generations of master artisans, Tantipara remains a living testament to Bengal’s textile excellence. Art, craft and storytelling converge to honour the weavers whose hands continue to preserve this priceless legacy.

“Murshidabad gears up for its biggest-ever Heritage Festival starting from February 6–8, celebrating the city’s rich history, culture and timeless legacy,” said Pradip Chopra, President of the MHDS.

Speaking about the festival, Mr. Sandip Nowlakha, Founding Member of MHDS said, “Murshidabad isn’t just a destination, it is a living chapter of Indian history. Through this festival, we want people to feel its soul, to walk its historic lanes, experience its traditional cuisine and understand the legacy that once defined Bengal. Our aim is to revive pride, preserve heritage and open its doors to the world in a meaningful and sustainable way impacting the economy”.

The Murshidabad Heritage Festival promises not just a celebration but a rare opportunity to step into a world where history, artistry and elegance continue to endure.

Mahindra Farm Equipment Posts 46% Domestic Growth with 38,484 Tractors Sold in Jan 2026

Chandigarh, Feb 01, : Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd.’s Farm Equipment Business part of the Mahindra Group, today announced its tractor sales numbers for January 2026.

Domestic sales in January 2026 were at 38,484 units, as against 26,305 units in January 2025, reflecting a 46% year-on-year growth.

Total tractor sales during January 2026 were at 40,643units, as against 27,557units for the same period last year. Exports for the month stood at 2,159 units which was a growth of 72%.

Commenting on the performance, Veejay Nakra, President Farm Equipment Business, Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd. said

We have sold 38,484 tractors in the domestic market during January 2026 registering a robust growth of 46% over last year. High reservoir levels have supported record growth in Rabi sowing. Expectations of government support and higher allocation in rural development in the budget today should positively influence agriculture and farm mechanization in the coming months. In the exports market, we have sold 2,159 tractors, a growth of 72% over last year.”

India leads a ‘Global Vision for Patient Safety’ at Day 1 of Apollo Hospitals International Health Dialogue 2026

Bengaluru, January 30, 2026: International Health Dialogue (IHD) 2026 opened today in Hyderabad, bringing together clinicians, patient safety leaders, accreditation experts, and health system policymakers from India and abroad. With the theme Global Voices. One Vision. Day 1 centred patient safety where it truly belongs, as a leadership and governance priority, shaped by equity and enabled by responsible digital transformation. The discussions reflected a clear direction across geographies: India’s lived experience of delivering care at scale, while steadily strengthening standards and accountability, is increasingly informing how the world thinks about patient safety and trust.

Opening the conference, Dr. Sangita Reddy, Joint Managing Director, Apollo Hospitals Group, recalled the founding purpose of IHD as a platform built for sharing learning that should not remain confined to individual systems. “So much innovation is happening within our hospitals, within our systems. We are learning every day. But why is this knowledge staying within our own ecosystem? Why are we not sharing it more openly?” she said, adding that the intent has always been to “take what we have learned and make it useful for others.” Reflecting the expanding global relevance of the platform, she noted that IHD 2026 received over 5,000 registrations, 300+ paper submissions, and 120+ award entries from 75+ institutions worldwide.

Setting the tone for outcomes that work in real life, Dr Jayesh Ranjan, Special Chief Secretary for the Industries & Commerce (I&C) and Information Technology (IT) Departments, Government of Telangana, highlighted why equity must sit at the centre of patient safety design. “When we talk about sharing learning and improving systems, we have to start with the truth that patients are not homogeneous. Different patients live in different worlds, and safety means different things in each,” he said. “An equity lens forces a design lens. If we want patient safety to hold up in the real world, we must design for those who are most vulnerable, and we must plan for continuity, access, and how people actually behave,” he added. On digital inclusion, he observed, “The digital divide is not only infrastructure. Often, the mindset divide is bigger.”

Across the day, speakers converged on one practical point: patient safety outcomes increasingly depend on how well the ecosystem works as a coordinated whole, across regulators, accreditors, providers, and technology partners. In the opening plenary, Dr. Madhu Sasidhar, President and Chief Executive Officer, Hospitals Division, Apollo Hospitals Enterprise Limited, emphasised shared ownership and organisational accountability. “Patient safety cannot be solved by one stakeholder alone. It requires regulators, governments, accreditors, providers, and technology firms to work as one. Patient safety is not a departmental responsibility. It is in fact an organisational leadership responsibility.”

A strong thread through multiple sessions was the need to move from reactive care to earlier, more preventive intervention. Speaking to the pressure health systems face globally, Dr Sangita Reddy noted, “Healthcare demand is rising. We cannot solve exponential problems with linear solutions.” The discussions linked this to sharper prevention strategies, clearer outcome measurement, and digital tools that are deployed with discipline and accountability.

From a global quality and safety lens, Dr. Carsten Engel, CEO, International Society for Quality in Health Care (ISQua), reflected on the gap between sustained attention and on-ground improvement. “Patient safety has been on the agenda for decades, but we still have to say we are not there yet,” he said. He cautioned against adding activity without impact, noting, “We risk creating safety clutter, procedures and activities done in the name of safety that do not improve safety.” He urged leaders to adopt a systems view of behaviour and context: “Don’t ask why people didn’t do what they should have done. Ask why it made sense for them to do what they did.”

On standards and execution, Dr. Atul Mohan Kochhar, CEO, National Accreditation Board for Hospitals & Healthcare Providers (NABH), underlined urgency with an implementation-first approach. “Patient safety is not only a technical issue. It is a moral, social, and economic imperative. Policies alone do not improve safety. Implementation efficiency does,” he said. Reinforcing ambition in measurable terms, he added, “We must be ambitious when it comes to patient safety. Zero harm is the only number that can be accepted for patient safety risk.”

Building on this emphasis on implementation, accountability, and measurable safety outcomes, Apollo Hospitals also signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Roche Diagnostics India as part of Day 1 proceedings to explore the integration of advanced artificial intelligence into clinical decision-making. The collaboration will focus on translating AI-enabled insights into practical, clinician-friendly support across care pathways, strengthening consistency in clinical judgement, earlier risk identification, and safer, more standardised care delivery at scale.

Apollo’s emphasis on culture-led transformation was articulated by Dr. Rohini Sridhar, Chief of Medical Services, Apollo Hospitals, who stressed that systems improve only when clinical teams move together with the organisation. “Unless clinicians walk with you, zero harm cannot be achieved. If one unit experiences harm, every unit must learn immediately. Technology accelerates learning, but culture determines action.”

Later in the day, IHD 2026 hosted a dedicated spotlight session for the newly launched digital health startup community, with a curated set of startups pitching to investors. The session focused on solutions grounded in real clinical and operational gaps, including safer workflows, decision support, early risk identification, improved documentation, and scalable patient engagement. The segment reinforced IHD’s emphasis on translating innovation into validated, implementable tools that strengthen safety, outcomes, and trust.

IHD 2026 continues on January 31 in Hyderabad with further sessions and showcases focused on patient safety, digital transformation, healthcare operations, and clinical learning.

​Surya Loan Revamps IT Infrastructure to Power Faster, Safer Digital Lending Across India

New Delhi, Feb 01st: Surya Loan, one of the known RBI- regulated digital lending NBFCs, has successfully revamped its IT infrastructure with the aim to offer a more secure, faster, and seamless digital lending experience to its customers in India. This comprehensive overhaul is an example to the company’s dedication to technology-driven growth, customer trust, and data security in the digital financial landscape.

The infrastructure upgrade also encompasses high-performance backend solutions that are able to handle the maximum user traffic, thus reducing downtime and ensuring smooth app functionality. With the improved system stability and processing capabilities, Surya Loan is now able to handle fast loan verifications, eligibility approvals, and underwriting approvals, thus ensuring fast approval times for customers.

One of the key aspects of the upgrade is the incorporation of advanced security APIs that work towards protecting customer data. The advanced security APIs are capable of monitoring any unusual activity, checking the authenticity of incoming requests, and ensuring that all data transactions are encrypted. The new systems will therefore ensure that Surya Loan is fully compliant with RBI digital lending norms.

Further strengthening its technology backbone, Surya Loan has implemented multi-layer data encryption, a zero-trust access model, and real-time threat monitoring. These features are in addition to the customer experience improvements that include seamless document uploads, automated verifications, push notifications, and real-time in-app loan tracking, providing a faster and seamless experience even during peak times.

On this occasion, the Manish Bansal, Managing Director of Surya Loan said, “This upgrade in the infrastructure is an investment in the trust of our customers. Through this, we are ensuring that our customers not only get faster loan approvals but also the best possible data security. Our aim is to make digital lending safe, reliable, and hassle-free for the salaried class of India.”

Founded with the aim of making credit access easier for the working class in India, Surya Loan provides instant personal loans of up to ₹1,00,000 with approval in just 10 minutes. With operations in over 150 cities, the company provides a 100% paperless lending experience to over one million active users.

With its enhanced IT infrastructure and customer-centric strategy, Surya Loan is all set to continue its positioning as a future-ready and technology-driven online lending platform in the fintech industry in India.

Apollo Hospitals commits to year-round operations and announces ‘Hospital of the Future’ at IHD 2026

Ahmedabad, Feb 01st: Apollo Hospitals’ International Health Dialogue (IHD) 2026 concluded today in Hyderabad, with 27,000+ participants joining both in person and online over two days. With the theme Global Voices. One Vision., the programme brought together clinicians, patient safety leaders, accreditation experts, technologists, and health system policymakers from India and abroad, and received 300+ paper submissions and 120+ award entries from 75+ institutions worldwide, reflecting the depth and diversity of engagement around leadership-led safety, equity in system design, and responsible digital transformation for measurable outcomes and trust.

The programme also saw participation from senior Indian and international policymakers and health ministers, together with global quality and patient safety leaders, including Konda Vishweshwar Reddy, Member of Parliament (Lok Sabha), Chevella, Telangana; Jonathan B. Perlin, President and Chief Executive Officer, Joint Commission International (JCI); Carsten Engel, Chief Executive Officer, International Society for Quality in Health Care (ISQua); Atul Mohan Kochhar, Chief Executive Officer, National Accreditation Board for Hospitals & Healthcare Providers (NABH); Jean Rosaire Ibara, Hon’ble Minister of Health and Population, The Republic of Congo; Grace Ayensu-Danquah, Hon’ble Deputy Minister of Health, Ghana; Sarah Cleto Rial, Minister of Health, Republic of South Sudan; and Huʻakavameiliku Siaosi Sovaleni, Hon’ble Minister of Health, Tonga.

Opening IHD 2026, Dr. Sangita Reddy, Joint Managing Director, Apollo Hospitals Group, announced Apollo’s next phase of technology-led transformation, including a Hospital of the Future coming soon in Hyderabad, and an undertaking to build a Health System of the Future that extends beyond hospital walls. Framing the shift underway, she said “Healthcare is moving from institutions to systems, from episodic care to continuous health, and from manual processes to AI-embedded workflows. Technology is not an add-on. It is becoming the operating layer of healthcare, provided it remains human-led and empathy-driven. Our challenge cannot be solved by linear growth. Healthcare needs exponential solutions.”

Dr. Sangita Reddy also outlined the initiatives underpinning Apollo’s Health System of the Future undertaking, including Dial50 for non-clinical patient requests, the Microsoft partnership to build Clinician Copilot and Patient Copilot with human-in-the-loop governance, a preventive health AI platform with risk scoring and guided wellness pathways already running at scale with millions of API calls, and Apollo 24/7 serving 40 million+ users as the digital front door to care. “AI must remove mundane work, not human judgment. Safety improves when intelligence moves from retrospective review to real-time intervention,” she said, linking the roadmap to remote monitoring with zero code blue events in covered wards and 5G-connected ambulances that extend clinical oversight into emergency response.

In a virtual address, Dr. Prathap C. Reddy announced that Apollo Hospitals will operate 24×7, 365 days a year, including weekends and holidays, encouraging a shift in how care availability is defined for patients. “Healthcare cannot sleep when people fall sick. Healthcare must be available every day, not just working days. Technology must always serve compassion, not replace it. The future of healthcare is not in hospitals alone, but in everyday life.”

Speaking on the Government’s strategic focus on patient safety and healthcare, Konda Vishweshwar Reddy, Member of Parliament (Lok Sabha), Chevella, Telangana, said, “Artificial intelligence is a strategic priority for the Government of India, especially for healthcare, agriculture, and education. AI will institutionalise medical expertise and reach the remotest communities. Data quality, granularity, and absence of bias will determine AI success. India’s public digital infrastructure gives us a strong foundation to build scaled, interoperable innovation.”

Dr. Madhu Sasidhar, President and Chief Executive Officer, Hospitals Division, Apollo Hospitals Enterprise Limited, spoke of the need for shared accountability across stakeholders saying, “Patient safety today sits at the intersection of governance, AI, regulation, and collaboration. Artificial intelligence must deliver value at scale, not pilots in silos. Quality and outcomes are usually assumed. Rather, they must be incentivized.”

Jonathan B. Perlin, President and Chief Executive Officer, Joint Commission International (JCI), shared his perspective on trust in healthcare, saying, and “Safe, effective, compassionate care is the foundation of trust. All people. Always. In all settings. Responsible AI must be integrated into healthcare operations, not bolted on. Trust depends on consistency across settings, operational integration, and clear accountability.”

The programme also featured “Unscripted with Mr Arnab Goswami,” where Arnab Ranjan Goswami, Editor-in-Chief, Republic Media Network, moderated an on-stage conversation with Ms Shobana Kamineni, Executive Chairperson, Apollo Health Co Ltd and Apollo Pharmacies Ltd. The conversation explored whether technology can truly improve health outcomes, why awareness often does not translate into action, and what prevention must look like in everyday life.

Alongside the main programme, THNX hosted the Startup Dome at International Health Dialogue (IHD) 2026 in Hyderabad, organised in partnership with Startup Réseau, as a deployment-led pathway where shortlisted startups engaged with clinician and investor panels.

BlackSoil Capital Secures ICRA Credit Rating Upgrade on Improved Capitalisation and Asset Quality

Feb 1: BlackSoil Capital, one of India’s leading alternative credit platforms providing flexible financing solutions to growth-stage businesses, has received an upgrade in its credit ratings from ICRA Limited.

ICRA has upgraded BlackSoil’s long-term rating to [ICRA]A- (Stable) from [ICRA]BBB+ (Positive), and its short-term rating to [ICRA]A2+ from [ICRA]A2. In addition, ICRA has enhanced the rated amount for the company’s facilities.

The rating upgrade reflects BlackSoil’s strengthening credit profile, supported by improved capitalisation, stable asset quality, disciplined risk management practices, and a resilient funding and liquidity position, as outlined in ICRA’s rating rationale.

Key Details of the Rating Upgrade

Enhanced Credit Profile

  • The long-term rating upgrade reflects BlackSoil’s improved capitalisation, calibrated portfolio growth, and consistent financial performance.
  • Stable asset quality trends and disciplined underwriting across cycles have contributed to the strengthening of the company’s credit profile.
  • The upgrade in the short-term rating highlights BlackSoil’s comfortable liquidity position and improving funding profile.

Instrument-wise Rating Actions

  • Long-term/Short-term bank lines – Fund-based: Upgraded to [ICRA]A- (Stable)/[ICRA]A2+; upgraded from [ICRA]BBB+ (Positive)/[ICRA]A2; rated amount enhanced to ₹955 crore from ₹650 crore.
  • Commercial Paper Programme: Upgraded to [ICRA]A2+ from [ICRA]A2; rated amount maintained at ₹50 crore.
  • Total Rated Amount: Enhanced to ₹1,005 crore from ₹700 crore.

ICRA’s Stable outlook reflects the expectation that BlackSoil will maintain its credit metrics while continuing to scale its lending operations in a prudent and measured manner, supported by sound risk governance and liquidity management.

Commenting on the credit rating upgrade, Mr. Ankur Bansal, Managing Director, BlackSoil Capital, said:

The upgrade of BlackSoil Capital’s long-term rating to [ICRA]A- (Stable) and short-term rating to [ICRA]A2+ by ICRA Limited is a strong validation of the institution we are building. Our focus on disciplined underwriting, a robust risk management framework, and calibrated growth has helped us strengthen our credit profile while remaining prudent across cycles. A differentiated alternative credit approach, improved capitalisation, and a steadily diversified funding base have enabled us to deliver consistent performance. As we scale, our priority remains to build BlackSoil into a trusted, long-term partner for India’s growth-stage businesses – known for responsible capital, strong governance, and speed of execution.

The upgraded rating is expected to further strengthen confidence among lenders, investors, and other stakeholders, and support BlackSoil’s long-term strategy of scaling its alternative credit platform while maintaining a strong focus on asset quality and risk discipline.

Air India Converts 15 Airbus A321neo Orders To Latest Generation A321XLR

Chandigarh, Jan 01st:  Air India, India’s leading global airline, today announced the conversion of 15 of its current orders for Airbus A321neo aircraft to the advanced Airbus A321XLR (Extra Long Range) variant. The conversion of the orders was announced today on the sidelines of Wings India 2026, a one of Asia’s premier civil aviation events, in Hyderabad. 

The conversion is part of Air India’s landmark orders placed with Airbus in 2023 with an addition in 2024, comprising a total of 50 twin-aisle A350 and 300 single-aisle A320 Family aircraft. Of the 300 single-aisle aircraft, this conversion to A321XLR applies to 15 of 210 A321neo aircraft ordered, while the remainder 90 A320neo remain as originally structured. The deliveries of the 15 A321XLR are expected between 2029 and 2030. 

The A321XLR, the latest variant in the evolution of the widely successful A320neo Family, offers a range of up to 4,700 nautical miles (or 8,700 kilometres) while delivering exceptional fuel efficiency, reduced emissions, and superior onboard comfort for passengers. This capability will enable Air India to open new non-stop international routes and optimise high-demand, medium-haul international services, with the flight economics of a single-aisle aircraft. 

Campbell Wilson, Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director, Air India, said: “The strategic conversion of a portion of our single-aisle Airbus aircraft orders to the A321XLR is in line with our effort of positioning Air India for the future. While we transform our current fleet at an accelerated pace with new and retrofitted aircraft, we are also carefully building our future fleet that, with scale and versatility, serves the rapidly evolving needs of travellers from and to India. We are happy with our strong partnership with Airbus, who continue to support our vision with the latest of aviation excellence.” 

“Air India’s decision to select the A321XLR is a significant endorsement of this game-changing aircraft. The A321XLR is proving to be a revenue generator by boosting frequencies, managing seasonality, and optimising capacity on medium-haul routes. We are pleased to see Air India using the XLR’s efficiency and range to open new opportunities and strengthen India’s connections with the rest of the world,” said Benoit de Saint-Exupéry, Airbus Executive Vice President of Commercial Aircraft Sales. 

Air India and Airbus are long-standing partners. The two companies have a 50:50 joint venture that has set up an advanced pilot training centre, inaugurated in September 2025, at the Air India Training Academy in Gurugram, Haryana. The state-of-the-art facility, equipped with 10 Full Flight Simulators (FFS), will train more than 5,000 new pilots over the next decade to support the exponential growth of commercial aviation in India. 

Currently, Air India has outstanding deliveries of 542 new aircraft (including 344 with Airbus) out of its total firm orders for 600 aircraft, underscoring its commitment to building one of the world’s youngest and most efficient fleets to support India’s growing aviation ambitions. 

Since its privatisation in January 2022, the Air India group has added nearly 170 aircraft to its fleet through a combination of new deliveries, strategic leases, merger of erstwhile Vistara into Air India, and the reactivation of long-grounded aircraft, thus marking significant progress in capacity expansion and fleet modernisation.