Cash-strapped Air India is looking forward to using assets it has built
up over the years like pricless paintings, sculptures and even a prime
property to ease financial stress.
The company has in its
possession paintings by artists like the late M.F. Husain, exotic wood
carvings, centuries-old sculptures and other authentic artifacts, and a
prime property in Mumbai.
A company official said plans are being
finalised to rent out some of these magnificent pieces and the iconic
Nariman Point headquarters in Mumbai.
"We are planning to appoint a consultant for cataloguing and valuation of the art works," a senior Air India official told IANS.
"The
art works may be rented out to galleries around the world. On a later
stage these may be sold as well," he said, not wishing to be identified.
The
consultant that will be hired by the airline will have a hard time to
put exact value to the huge collection which deals with Indian history
and culture.
The richness of the stuff can be gauged by the fact
that some 18 paintings of Husain are part of the collection. Some of
these date back to the 1940s.
Each of these paintings can command a price of no less than Rs.5-6 crore in open bidding process, the official said.
Other
artifacts under the carrier's possession include centuries-old exotic
wooden carvings portraying mythology. For example, a carving shows
Ravana carrying Shiva, Parvati and Ganesha.
Most of these 400 artifacts adorn the walls of the Mumbai building and the airline's offices in New York, London and Paris.
The
iconic 22-storey Air India building at Nariman Point which house the
chairman and managing director's office can command a handsome rent of
Rs.290-350 per square feet.
"The plan is to retain the top three
floors of the building, while the rest would be rented out. We expect to
get anywhere between Rs.30-40 crore per annum. We will go for an open
tender for the renting process," the official said.
Currently,
two floors in the building are rented out to information technology
major Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) while an area approximately of one
floor is given out to other small offices.
Renting out the art
works and the building is expected to fetch the company around Rs.100
crore annually. Sale of these can easily bring in Rs.10,000 crore, said
the official.
The airline plans to shift executives to its New Delhi office at Airlines House in Parliament Street.
The
move is expected to provide financial relief to the company which
currently is reeling under an accumulated losses and loans of around
Rs.67,520 crore.
The company has taken Rs.21,200 crore as the
working capital loan, Rs.22,000 crore worth of long-term loans for
aircraft acquisition, Rs. 4,600 crore of vendor bills and an accumulated
loss of Rs.20,320 crore.
The government in April approved a
turnaround plan and a financial restructure plan for which it will
receive some Rs.30,000 crore worth of equity infusion over a period of
nine years.
The proposal to rent out the artifacts and the Mumbai building is not part of the turnaround plan.




