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Gatwick cutbacks mount

Virgin Atlantic the latest airline to back away from airport

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LONDON: The coronaviru­s is muddying the outlook for London’s second-biggest airport.

Richard Branson’s Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd became the latest carrier to back away from London Gatwick, saying on Tuesday it would shutter its operation at least temporaril­y to focus on the much larger Heathrow.

With arch-rival British Airways reportedly looking to do the same, and Gatwick’s third-largest tenant, Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA, retrenchin­g to survive the winter, the south London hub is feeling the brunt of a travel collapse that’s suddenly quelled the daily bustle of people through the city’s six main airports.

Business was booming before the health crisis crushed demand and prompted groundings of entire airline fleets. Gatwick, traditiona­lly a hub for the leisure set, had aspired to snag some of London Heathrow’s full-service passengers. Owner Vinci SA is seeking to convert an emergency runway for regular use, while Heathrow has also targeted expansion.

With operations by IAG Sa-owned British Airways and trans-atlantic specialist Virgin Atlantic now in doubt, Gatwick will be forced to evolve with more services focused on the low-cost end of the marketplac­e, said Peter Morris, chief economist of Ascend, which tracks air travel.

London Luton-based Easyjet Plc, the biggest operator at Gatwick, may decide to locate more services there in the aftermath of the lockdown, he said, as could discount giant Ryanair Holdings Plc, which has its main hub at Stansted, north of the capital.

“With excellent access for catchment to London and the South East, Gatwick is better placed than Luton or Stansted to meet recovering passenger demand,” Morris said. “It could be the case that Ryanair and Easyjet choose to concentrat­e more services there, at the expense of the other two – although airport charges may be an issue.”

Traffic at Gatwick fell 23% to 7.5 million passengers in the first quarter. The airport has put over 90% of eligible staff on a UK furlough plan and is considerin­g permanent reductions, it said last month.

Still, its expansion plans are proceeding. The airport moved a step closer to adding the second runway when the UK Civil Aviation Authority, in a decision published this month, said that the proposal wouldn’t require any changes to airspace use. The decision doesn’t authorise the start of physical works or dual-runway operations.

The decision by Virgin to retain its slots at the airport is an indication of Gatwick’s competitiv­eness, Vinci said in a statement.

“We remain confident in the desire of our clients to remain mobile and the perspectiv­e of a rebound in traffic when confinemen­t and border restrictio­ns are lifted,” Vinci said.

The French builder paid Us$3.7bil in December 2018 to acquire control of Gatwick, currently the world’s second-busiest single-runway airport.

Norwegian Air plans to ground its fleet of 787 Dreamliner­s that serves US cities such as Los Angeles and New York until next year. The struggling airline this week won shareholde­r approval for a debt-to-equity swap and share sale that’s aimed at unlocking a state bailout that would get it through the next several months.

The airline industry may lose Us$314bil in revenue this year because of travel shutdowns and increasing toll on the global economy, the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n has forecast.

Morris expects a recovery to be “pushed further and further back into 2021”. —

 ?? Reuters ?? Back to Heathrow: A British airways aeroplane tailfin and a Virgin Atlantic aeroplane are seen with the control tower at Heathrow airport. Virgin Atlantic said it planned to cut 3,150 jobs and would move its flying programme from London Gatwick to Heathrow airport. —
Reuters Back to Heathrow: A British airways aeroplane tailfin and a Virgin Atlantic aeroplane are seen with the control tower at Heathrow airport. Virgin Atlantic said it planned to cut 3,150 jobs and would move its flying programme from London Gatwick to Heathrow airport. —

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