The Sun (Malaysia)

AirAsia to digitalise air travel

> Lauds Changi Terminal 4 as model airport of the future for low-cost carriers

- BY EE ANN NEE

SINGAPORE: AirAsia yesterday announced its plan to enhance air travel experience through digitalisa­tion, setting Singapore Changi Airport Terminal 4 (T4) as the model airport of the future for low-cost carriers (LCCs).

AirAsia will use data from its operations at Changi T4, which boasts the Fast and Seamless Travel (FAST) system, as an ongoing case study on how to improve LCC airport processes through greater digitalisa­tion, with lessons from its experience at T4 to be rolled out across AirAsia Group.

AirAsia Group CEO Tan Sri Tony Fernandes said airports in Thailand, the Philippine­s, Indonesia, as well as Senai airport in Malaysia have started to embark on digitalisa­tion initiative­s with AirAsia. He said Senai airport is now testing the facial recognitio­n feature and that the momentum for digitalisa­tion is beginning, but pointed out that klia2 is far behind (in digitalisa­tion compared with T4).

“Moving to T4 is another step in our journey to become a digital airline. We have already embarked on a series of measures to make our pre-flight, inflight and post-flight experience­s better and more enjoyable for guests, from Rokki, our ‘Amazon of the Skies’ online shopping and travel 3Sixty onground activities to our financial product Big Pay and loyalty programme and virtual currency Big Loyalty,” Fernandes told a media conference during unveiling of the airline’s digitalisa­tion plan.

He said AirAsia also plans to work with software company Palantir to develop a secure entry system for trusted travellers to speed up immigratio­n at airports within Asean through collaborat­ion with airports and government agencies, as well as improve operationa­l, safety and commercial processes within the group by integratin­g data from multiple sources using Skywise by Airbus.

“Now, working with Changi Airport Group (CAG), we are moving on to the digitalisa­tion of our airport experience. The improved savings and efficienci­es from FAST align with our quest to maintain the lowest cost structure as well as our vision of seamless travel, which means lower fares for our guests and more traffic for Changi.”

AirAsia moved its Singapore operations to Changi T4 from Terminal 1 on Nov 7, 2017. The state-of-the-art, fully-automated terminal incorporat­es FAST initiative­s such as automated check-in kiosks to retrieve flight bookings and print boarding passes and bag tags, automated bag drops, immigratio­n clearance and boarding gates, all powered by facial recognitio­n technology.

In addition to the user experience and efficienci­es from FAST, AirAsia will also benefit from growth incentives for new passengers and new city links provided by CAG that will allow the airline to add more flights and introduce new routes, improving connectivi­ty with Singapore.

T4 will serve both full-service and LCCs and be able to handle 16 million passengers a year. Other airlines that operate out of T4 are Cathay Pacific, Korean Air, Vietnam Airlines, Cebu Pacific Air and Spring Airlines.

Last year, LCCs accounted for slightly over 30% of passenger traffic in Singapore. AirAsia is the largest foreign airline group in Singapore, accounting for more than one in eight passengers, and is the largest LCC in Changi T4.

AirAsia Singapore was establishe­d in 2004 on a virtual hub model. The airline started with two flights a day to Bangkok, Thailand. Today, Singapore is AirAsia’s third largest hub, serving 40 flights daily and 280 flights weekly. Flights to and from Singapore are operated by four AirAsia affiliates – in Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippine­s – connecting a total of 15 destinatio­ns across Asean.

Meanwhile, Fernandes reiterated AirAsia’s stance for different passenger service charges at Malaysian airports to reflect the available facilities at the individual airports, as opposed to blanket rates.

 ??  ?? AirAsia Singapore CEO Logan Velaitham (left) and Fernandes explaining AirAsia’s digitalisa­tion plans to the media in Singapore yesterday.
AirAsia Singapore CEO Logan Velaitham (left) and Fernandes explaining AirAsia’s digitalisa­tion plans to the media in Singapore yesterday.

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