Arab Times

Dubai airport CEO: Global travel still up in air over virus

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The CEO of the world’s busiest airport for internatio­nal travel wants to get the globe flying again, but even he acknowledg­es everything remains up in the air during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Paul Griffiths oversees what now is a much quieter Dubai Internatio­nal Airport, home to the long-haul carrier Emirates and crucial to East-West travel. The millions that once poured through the airport’s concourses are no longer flying as countries around the world enforce lockdowns and travel bans to fight the virus and the COVID-19 illness it causes.

Though government-owned Emirates plans to restart some flights next week, Griffiths told The Associated Press that the airport has yet to find a workable coronaviru­s or antibody test to administer on a massive scale to passengers. Until a vaccine or a permanent solution to the virus exists, there could be “quite a low level of activity for quite some time,” he said.

“I think the thing is there are a lot of people that are offering conjecture, whether it’s 18 months or two years or less or more,” Griffiths said in an interview Wednesday. “But the problem is it’s all conjecture. The honest answer is no one really knows.”

The airport known as DXB saw 86.4 million passengers in 2019, 6 million more than second-place Heathrow Airport in London. That’s down 3% from 2018 when Dubai had 89.1 million passengers.

But air travel this year has been disrupted by the virus. In the first quarter, Dubai Internatio­nal Airport’s passenger numbers dropped by nearly a fifth to 17.8 million compared to last year. Cargo and repatriati­on flights have been flying, however.

 ??  ?? In this file photo, Dubai Airports CEO Paul Griffiths walks out of Dubai Internatio­nal Airport’s Terminal 3 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
In this file photo, Dubai Airports CEO Paul Griffiths walks out of Dubai Internatio­nal Airport’s Terminal 3 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

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