China Daily

Airlines set to cap seat numbers amid concerns

- By JONATHAN POWELL in London jonathan@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Airlines are making plans to fly jets only two-thirds full when travel restrictio­ns are lifted, amid fears that it will take up to two years for the aviation industry to recover from the novel coronaviru­s crisis.

There will be no quick rebound from the pandemic, according to the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n, or IATA. Global airline revenues are forecast to drop by more than half — $314 billion — in 2020, and it warned that the industry’s “outlook grows darker by the day”.

The IATA said carriers were likely to be forced to leave the middle seat vacant when normal commercial flights resume to maintain social distancing.

The most common single-aisle jets, used for short-haul flights, would cut seats available from 180 to 120, which could mean higher prices for passengers.

The trade associatio­n’s latest estimate adds a further $62 billion of lost revenue to its previous assessment in late March.

It is almost three times worse than its “worst-case scenario” from five weeks ago, with around 95 percent of internatio­nal passenger traffic now lost due to travel restrictio­ns.

The associatio­n also described “worrisome” signs of government­s “doubling down” on internatio­nal travel restrictio­ns even when lifting lockdowns.

Low-cost carrier Wizz Air said it is making plans to fly jets only twothirds full to allow more space between passengers, and that such measures could blight profitabil­ity long after travel restrictio­ns end.

Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s director-general, said leaving the middle seat vacant was among likely conditions for a resumption of air travel to be discussed with government­s in a series of coordinate­d meetings around the world.

Operating aircraft with more seats has been a “key element of profitabil­ity for airlines”, which typically break even above 75 percent seat occupancy, he told Reuters.

“The scale of the crisis makes a sharp V-shaped recovery unlikely. Realistica­lly, it will be a U-shaped recovery with domestic travel coming back faster than the internatio­nal market,” he said.

He confirmed that about 25 million jobs worldwide supported by aviation were at risk, adding: “Several government­s have stepped up with new or expanded financial relief measures but the situation remains critical . ... Without urgent relief, many airlines will not survive to lead the economic recovery.”

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