Manila Bulletin

Airlines improvise gradual lift-off as lockdowns ease

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN (AFP) — Cabin crews on standby with destinatio­ns revealed only hours before the flight, pilots put on simulators to keep up to date — an airline restarting after the pandemic is a far cry from the clockwork precision of the pre-coronaviru­s world.

“Flexibilit­y” is the top priority, said Lufthansa chief executive Carsten Spohr last week, as the airline has “developed completely new procedures in flight and route planning.”

As borders slammed shut to halt virus transmissi­on, about 90 percent of passenger connection­s at the German airline fell away, leaving an “emergency” timetable comparable to the 1950s.

Daily passengers dwindled to 3,000 from its usual 350,000.

With the peak of the crisis over in Europe, the airline is plotting its restart — and the entire operation has been forced to act more nimbly to cope.

For Lufthansa crews, the inch-by-inch progress means ''they have almost no fixed shifts any more, only on-call periods,” Spohr said.

“They know how quickly they have to make it to the airport and that they should be nearby, and then they get a few hours' notice about where they're going.”

“Methods we've always used to patch over problems have become the standard,” he added.

Some flights, like the first India-bound service, have been dropped almost at the last moment for lack of landing authorizat­ion.

In other cases “colleagues all at once had to add a second flight in parallel” to meet high demand — including on a busy May holiday weekend when “I myself and our family” were on a waiting list, Spohr said.

“Historic data we've gathered over decades are useless for flight planning in the near future,” said chief financial officer Thorsten Dirks, explaining that Lufthansa's “artificial intelligen­ce has to be re-trained” to address the altered situation.

“In these cases, human beings are faster and more flexible.”

Flight and cabin crew on standby through the period must also be kept up to date.

Some pilots have been flying simulators to stay in touch, while other airlines like Senegal's Transair have been operating empty flights to maintain pilots' licences.

Around 700 of Lufthansa's 763 aircraft were grounded at the peak of the lockdowns, parked in orderly rows on the apron of Frankfurt airport — and even taking up one of the runways.

Lufthansa is keen to get them up in the air as a longer out-time means more technical work to get them flying again.

After up to three months of inactivity, planes “can be reactivate­d in one or two days,” Lufthansa spokeswoma­n Lara Matuschek said.

Any longer time out means placing them into “deep storage,” with steps like antibacter­ial treatments for the empty fuel tanks.

“There are much higher hurdles to reactivati­on” from deep storage, and “it can take up to four weeks” as more extensive maintenanc­e work may be needed, Matuschek explained.

From early June, the German juggernaut has been offering more routes, aiming to serve 90 percent of short-haul and 70 percent of longhaul destinatio­ns by September.

But it will only offer around 40 percent of its usual capacity and has been forced to turn to Berlin for a nine-billion-euro ($10.1 billion) bailout.

“Our main aim was to connect major German and European cities to our hubs” like Germany's biggest airport Frankfurt, hoping also “to fly to strong tourist destinatio­ns,” Matuschek told AFP.

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