The Edge Singapore

Mass air travel’s return at least two years away: Ong Ye Kung

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The global aviation industry will take at least two years to recover from the coronaviru­s pandemic and for mass travel to return, Transport Minister Ong Ye Kung says, stressing the importance of developing a widely available and effective vaccine to help countries open their borders.

“When a vaccine is widely available around the world and people gain confidence to travel again and visit other countries, then we will have aviation back on its feet, almost fully,” Ong says in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “How long that will that take, I can’t make a guess; I would say minimally a couple of years.”

Singapore has to “find ways to try to revive” the aviation sector, the minister says, adding that Singapore’s testing capacity is now around 30,000 a day and may rise to 40,000 by November and probably further after then. A balance needs to be struck between travel and epidemic control, he adds.

Asked about Singapore Airlines ( SIA), which posted a record quarterly loss in the three months through June and is reducing its workforce by about 20%, Ong says the carrier faces a “dire situation” because of the pandemic and the fact that it has no domestic market to fall back on.

Virus-related travel restrictio­ns mean SIA, which raised $ 11 billion largely through a rights issue earlier in the crisis, is flying at a tiny fraction of its usual capacity. Traffic figures for August show the carrier’s passenger numbers were down 98.4% from a year earlier.

Whether SIA needs to raise more funds will largely depend on how successful any revival in travel is, Ong says. “The more we can revive, the more cash they can generate, the less their need for recapitali­sation.”

A regulatory filing in August showed the airline had used half of the $ 8.8 billion it raised through the share sales, highlighti­ng that carriers keep incurring expenses even when planes are left idle. The company is reviewing its fleet and operations.

To open borders and encourage people to travel again, quarantine must be replaced by effective Covid-19 testing, Ong says. “We have to gradually open up the borders, establish the key links that made us a hub.”

Ong says Singapore will need to review plans for a fifth terminal at Changi Airport. Constructi­on of the terminal, originally planned to be completed in 2030, has been suspended for at least two years. “The assumption­s when we went into Terminal 5 have totally changed,” he says. “I don’t have a prediction or a crystal ball to say what will happen to Terminal 5 and what will happen to global aviation.”—

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