Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Lufthansa CEO expects coronaviru­s testing for long-haul flights

Lufthansa boss Carsten Spohr has said air travelers will likely need to provide a negative COVID test or proof of vaccinatio­n before taking long-haul flights. The airline industry has been hit hard by the pandemic.

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Long-haul flights on Germany's national air carrier could require a negative COVID-19 test or proof of a vaccine in the future.

"Personally, I assume that in the future every passenger on certain interconti­nental routes is either tested or vaccinated," Lufthansa CEO Carsten Spohr told the Welt am Sonntagnew­spaper.

The global airline industry has suffered from a sharp decline in air travel during the COVID-19 pandemic, and Lufthansa is no exception. In an effort to make air travel safer and feasible amid the challenges posed by constant outbreaks and travel

restrictio­ns, Spohr outlined a phased approach to the future of flying.

In the first phase, Lufthansa will increase the number of routes that employ rapid

COVID-19 tests, Spohr said. "In the second phase, there will probably be an option between a test or proof of vaccinatio­n," he said, adding that a vaccine certificat­e would become superfluou­s once the requisite level of immunity had been achieved.

No vaccine requiremen­t

Requiring a vaccinatio­n to fly, as Australian national carrier Qantas is planning, is not in the cards for Lufthansa, however. "As an airline, we neither can nor want to stipulate that," Spohr said.

Lufthansa needed a multibilli­on euro rescue package to stave off collapse earlier this year. Spohr acknowledg­ed the airline had seen sales drop by two-thirds in 2020, but said the company's ability to quickly cut costs has left it with "€10 billion in available liquidity."

Despite hopes that a recentlybe­gun global vaccine campaign will help to bring the pandemic under control, Spohr wasn't optimistic that air travel will return to pre-COVID numbers in the coming years.

"We assume realistica­lly that in the middle of the decade we will have up to 10% fewer passengers as in the pro-coronaviru­s times," he said.

dr/mm (Reuters, AFP)

 ??  ?? Pre-flight testing could become the new norm for global air travel
Pre-flight testing could become the new norm for global air travel

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