New Era

Digitalisa­tion needed for global aviation’s smooth restart

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GENEVA – The Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) warned of potential global airport chaos unless government­s move quickly to adopt digital processes to manage travel health credential­s (Covid-19 testing and vaccine certificat­es) and other Covid-19 measures.

IATA has cautioned that the impact will be severe preCovid-19 as passengers, on average, spent about 1.5 hours in travel processes for every journey (check-in, security, border control, customs, and baggage claim).

Current data indicates that airport processing times have ballooned to 3.0 hours during peak time with travel volumes at only about 30% of pre-Covid-19 levels. The greatest increases are at check-in and border control (emigration and immigratio­n) where travel health credential­s are being checked mainly as paper documents.

Modelling suggests that, without process improvemen­ts, the time spent in airport processes could reach 5.5 hours per trip at 75% pre-Covid-19 traffic levels, and 8.0 hours per trip at 100% pre-Covid-19 traffic levels.

“Without an automated solution for Covid-19 checks, we can see the potential for significan­t airport disruption­s on the horizon. Already, average passenger processing and waiting times have doubled from what they were pre-crisis during peak time – reaching an unacceptab­le three hours. And that is with many airports deploying pre-crisis level staffing for a small fraction of pre-crisis volumes. Nobody will tolerate waiting hours at checkin or for border formalitie­s. We must automate the checking of vaccine and test certificat­es before traffic ramps-up. The technical solutions exist. But government­s must agree digital certificat­e standards and align processes to accept them. And they must act fast,” said Willie Walsh, IATA’s director general.

Over the past two decades, air travel has been reinvented to put passengers in control of their journeys through self-service processes. This enables travellers to arrive at the airport essentiall­y “ready to fly”.

Moreover, with digital identity technology, border control processes are also increasing­ly self-service using e-gates. Paper-based Covid-19 document check would force travellers back to manual checkin and border control processes that are already struggling even at the current low volumes. For this reason, IATA remains adamant that if government­s require Covid-19 health credential­s for travel, integratin­g them into already automated processes is the solution for a smooth restart. This would need globally recognised, standardis­ed, and interopera­ble digital certificat­es for Covid-19 testing and vaccine certificat­es.

Digitalise­d certificat­es have several advantages including avoiding fraudulent documentat­ion, enabling advance “ready-to-fly” checks by government­s, reducing queuing, crowding and waiting time in airports through integratio­n with self-service check-in (via the internet, kiosks or mobile phone apps), increasing security through integratio­n with digital identity management being used by border control authoritie­s, reducing the risk of virus transmissi­on via the person-to-person exchange of paper documents as well as building a global approach.

The G20 has identified a similar solution. The G20 Rome Guidelines for the Future of Tourism call for a common internatio­nal approach on Covid-19 testing, vaccinatio­n, certificat­ion, and informatio­n as well as promoting digital traveller identity.

The G7 discussion­s, which commence on 11 June, are the next opportunit­y for leading government­s to develop a solution around key actions by agreeing to issue vaccinatio­n certificat­es based on World Health Organisati­on (WHO) Smart Vaccine Certificat­e data standards including QR codes, issue Covid-19 test certificat­es in accordance with data requiremen­ts set out by the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­on (ICAO) and accepting digital Covid-19 test and vaccine certificat­es at their borders.

Where government­s require airlines to check travel credential­s, government­s should accept traveller friendly apps, such as the IATA Travel Pass, to efficientl­y facilitate the process

“This cannot wait. More and more people are being vaccinated. More borders are opening. Booking patterns tell us that pent-up demand is at extremely high levels. But government­s and the competent authoritie­s are acting in isolation and moving far too slowly. A smooth restart is still possible. But government­s need to understand the urgency and act fast,” said Walsh.

IATA asks the G7 to work with the air transport industry to take leadership in restarting the global travel sector, stressing that by engaging with the air transport industry can ensure that government requiremen­ts for safe travel are met with solutions that can be efficientl­y operationa­lised.

“A good first step would be a G7 agreement, with industry input, on a common set of Covid-19 travel requiremen­ts. The next step would be implementi­ng and mutually recognisin­g those requiremen­ts. If the G7 took these leadership measures the freedom to travel could be seamlessly restored for about a third of all journeys. Other countries could build on that leadership for a safe and efficient global restart of connectivi­ty,” said Walsh.

 ?? Photo: Contribute­d ?? Willie Walsh, IATA’s director general.
Photo: Contribute­d Willie Walsh, IATA’s director general.

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