Never miss a great news story!
Get instant notifications from Economic Times
AllowNot now


You can switch off notifications anytime using browser settings.

Portfolio

Loading...
Select Portfolio and Asset Combination for Display on Market Band
Select Portfolio
Select Asset Class
Show More
Download ET MARKETS APP

Get ET Markets in your own language

DOWNLOAD THE APP NOW

+91

CHOOSE LANGUAGE

ENG

  • ENG - English
  • HIN - हिन्दी
  • GUJ - ગુજરાતી
  • MAR - मराठी
  • BEN - বাংলা
  • KAN - ಕನ್ನಡ
  • ORI - ଓଡିଆ
  • TEL - తెలుగు
  • TAM - தமிழ்
Drag according to your convenience
ET NOW RADIO
ET NOW
TIMES NOW

Why luxury trains running at 30 per cent occupancy, asks parliamentary panel

PTI|
Jan 04, 2018, 09.48 PM IST
0Comments
Untitled-21
The committee said a detailed analysis of the occupancy figure exposed a "shocking picture".
NEW DELHI: A parliamentary standing committee has asked the Railways to explain why it was running luxury trains with as low as 30 per cent occupancy.

The committee on Railways, which tabled its report on Tourism Promotion and Pilgrimage Circuit in Parliament today, said the ministry should take preventive measures to counter the trend.

The committee's critique came on a day when the Railways' senior-most official, chairman Railway Board, Ashwani Lohani, held the first interactive meeting with stakeholders in trade and travel to promote tourism in the national transporter.

"The committee has taken serious note of a lack of seriousness on the part of the ministry towards low occupancy in luxury trains and expect the ministry to properly examine and spell out the reasons for running such trains with as low as 30 per cent occupancy," the report said.

The committee said a detailed analysis of the occupancy figure exposed a "shocking picture".

The percentage of vacant seats during 2012-2017 has been 62.7 per cent, 57.76 per cent, 45.46 per cent, 45.81 per cent for Maharaja Express, Golden Chariot, Royal Rajasthan on Wheels, Deccan Odyssey and Palace on Wheels respectively.

The committee, headed by TMC MP Sudip Bandyopadhyay, said what it found more disturbing was that in Maharaja Express, which is completely run by the Indian Railways, without state collaboration, during 2012-2013, 2013-2014, 2014-2016 and 2016-2017, the occupancy had been 29.86 per cent, 32.33 per cent, 41.8 per cent, 41.58 per cent and 36.03 per cent respectively.

"Further, in the same train during 2013-2014, 758 seats were occupied out of 1,594 in which 97 seats had been occupied by complimentary travellers," it said.

The report has recommended that the Railways form a special panel to look into the various reasons for such low occupancy and advice the ministry a mechanism to attract more tourists towards these luxury trains.

It also suggested that the transport behemoth frame a policy on tariff/tour plan in such a way that tourists can avail the travel/facilities of these trains for amendable number of night or day not necessarily for whole journey of six-eight days as buying the whole package as offered by the Railways become expensive for most tourists.

"Two or three sub-plans of shorter duration within the given journey should be chalked out to offer more acceptability by potential customers," it said.
0Comments

Also Read

Disclose names of defaulters, suggests parliamentary panel

Government draws Parliamentary panel fire on military modernisation

Digital economy: Parliamentary panel suggests govt to form law on data privacy

Parliamentary panel concerned over delay in setting up telecom ombudsman

Take steps to prevent underutilisation of funds for pollution abatement: Parliamentary panel

Comments
Add Your Comments

Loading
Please wait...