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Post-pandemic airport chaos

Swift demand recovery of travel tourism surprises airports and airlines and causes long queues at some airports

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Atop airline industry official called for calm surroundin­g recent travel chaos at some airports as people resume flying after the pandemic, blaming the gridlock on temporary delays in getting clearances for new staff.

A snapback in air travel has triggered long queues at some British airports, as well as Amsterdam, Dublin and Toronto, as airport managers struggle to fill jobs fast enough.

The time needed to get security badges for newly hired staff has risen from three to four weeks in Britain, for example, to as long as three months, said Willie Walsh, director general of the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA).

"The problem is, you can't start the training until you've got the security clearance," Walsh told a small group of reporters on the sidelines of a conference on ground operations.

"You offer them a job, they accept it, and then you have to go through this period of three months to get security clearance they're not going to hang around. They'll go and find a job somewhere else."

The former British Airways and IAG boss said he did not expect the trend to spread to other regions, but he sounded the alarm on growing pilot shortages in the United States.

"I think it needs to be put in perspectiv­e; there are issues in some airports, it's not across the world," Walsh said. "I think it reflects the very significan­t increase in activity we've seen. It also reflects the fact that we're coming off a very low base. So as airlines and airports try to rebuild, it is challengin­g for some of them. It will get addressed."

The pandemic led to internatio­nal travel virtually shutting down as government­s around the world restricted entry. However, the easing of curbs and limited travel demand have led to an abrupt upswing in short- and medium-haul trips.

"Without question, what we're seeing at the moment is very strong demand right across the world. It's stronger than we had expected," he said, adding traffic was moving towards reaching 2019 levels in 2023, rather than 2024 as previously forecast.

Oil prices extended a bull run recently after the EU agreed to a partial and phased ban on Russian oil.

Walsh said airlines had coped in the past with oil prices well above $100 a barrel for benchmark Brent and carriers would eventually pass on these costs to passengers.

The crisis has seen the jet fuel prices to soar even more than crude because of scarce refining capacity, but Walsh said he expected that spread to narrow to more normal levels.

While Europe struggles to keep up with travel demand, Asian airspace is comparativ­ely still because of factors such as China's tough policies to control COVID-19.

Text pochází z agentury Reuters

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FOTO REUTERS

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