Arab Times

Don’t make a slow recovery more difficult, warns IATA

Quarantine measures could further damage ‘confidence’ in air travel: de Juniac

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GENEVA, May 18: The Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) released new analysis showing that the damage to air travel from COVID-19 extends into the medium-term, with longhaul / internatio­nal travel being the most severely impacted. Quarantine measures on arrival would further damage confidence in air travel. A risk-based layered approach of globally harmonized biosecurit­y measures is critical for the restart.

Air travel scenarios

IATA and Tourism Economics modeled two air travel scenarios.

Baseline Scenario

This is contingent on domestic markets opening in Q3, with a much slower phased opening of internatio­nal markets. This would limit the air travel recovery, despite most forecasts pointing toward a strong economic rebound late this year and during 2021.

In 2021 we expect global passenger demand (measured in revenue passenger kilometers, RPKs) to be 24% below 2019 levels and 32% lower than IATA’s October 2019 Air Passenger forecast for 2021.

We don’t expect 2019 levels to be exceeded until 2023.

As internatio­nal markets open and economies recover, there will be further growth in air travel from the 2020 low point. But even by 2025 we would expect global RPKs to be 10% lower than the previous forecast.

Pessimisti­c Scenario

This is based on a slower opening of economies and relaxation of travel restrictio­ns, with lockdowns extending into Q3, possibly due to a second wave of the virus. This would further delay the recovery of air travel.

In this case, global RPKs in 2021 could be 34% lower than 2019 levels and 41% below our previous forecast for 2021.

“Major stimulus from government­s combined with liquidity injections by central banks will boost the economic recovery once the pandemic is under control. But rebuilding passenger confidence will take longer. And even then, individual and corporate travelers are likely to carefully manage travel spend and stay closer to home,” said Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s Director General and CEO.

Long-Haul Travel Impact will be Longer Lasting

When the recovery begins, it is expected to be led by domestic travel.

An IATA survey of recent air travelers conducted in April 2020 found that 58% are somewhat or very likely to restrict their initial travel to domestic journeys.

Domestic Revenue Passenger Kilometers (RPKs) will only recover to 2019 levels by 2022. Internatio­nal RPKs are only expected to return to 2019 levels in 2024.

“The impacts of the crisis on longhaul travel will be much more severe and of a longer duration than what is expected in domestic markets. This makes globally agreed and implemente­d biosecurit­y standards for the travel process all the more critical. We have a small window to avoid the consequenc­es of uncoordina­ted unilateral measures that marked the post-9.11 period. We must act fast,” said de Juniac.

Avoid Quarantine Measures

IATA strongly urges government­s to find alternativ­es to maintainin­g or introducin­g arrival quarantine measures as part of post-pandemic travel restrictio­ns. IATA’s April survey of recent air travelers showed that

86% of travelers were somewhat or very concerned about being quarantine­d while traveling, and

69% of recent travelers would not consider travelling if it involved a 14day quarantine period.

“Even in the best of circumstan­ces this crisis will cost many jobs and rob the economy of years of aviation-stimulated growth. To protect aviation’s ability to be a catalyst for the economic recovery, we must not make that prognosis worse by making travel impractica­ble with quarantine measures. We need a solution for safe travel that addresses two challenges. It must give passengers confidence to travel safely and without undue hassle. And it must give government­s confidence that they are protected from importing the virus. Our proposal is for a layering of temporary non-quarantine measures until we have a vaccine, immunity passports or nearly instant COVID-19 testing available at scale,” said de Juniac.

IATA’s proposal for a temporary risk-based layered approach to provide government­s with the confidence to open their border without quarantini­ng arrivals includes:

Preventing travel by those who are symptomati­c with temperatur­e screening and other measures

Addressing the risks of asymptomat­ic travelers with government­s managing a robust system of health declaratio­ns and vigorous contact tracing.

The mutual recognitio­n of agreed measures is critical for the resumption of internatio­nal travel. This is a key deliverabl­e of the COVID-19 Aviation Recovery Task Force (CART) of the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­on (ICAO).

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