Bangkok Post

Airlines hit anew by travel clampdown

Ban ‘to hit staff, travellers hard’

- LISA BAERTLEIN DAVID SHEPARDSON

LOS ANGELES/WASHINGTON: A clampdown on European travel to the United States will heap more pressure on airlines already reeling from the coronaviru­s pandemic, analysts said, raising the odds of government relief packages as billions of dollars of tourist spending vanish.

The 30-day curbs from today, which exclude Britain, Ireland and other countries outside the European Schengen passport-free travel area, are similar to those that went into effect targeting China on Feb 1.

They come after the outbreak’s rapid spread across the European continent and in the United States.

Combined with a fresh US State Department advisory asking citizens to reconsider the need to travel globally, the move could create chaos at dozens of airports across Europe as passengers attempt a last-minute rush to fly to the United States before the ban takes effect.

Flights from Europe can still operate to a limited number of US airports with enhanced screening under measures announced on Wednesday evening. But only US citizens, permanent residents and immediate family members will be allowed in, severely denting the passenger base and hurting the US tourism industry.

As well as slashing arrivals, the move is set to decimate spending by European tourists in the United States.

In March 2019, European visitors to the US accounted for 29% of arrivals and $3.4 billion of spending, the US Travel Associatio­n said.

“Temporaril­y shutting off travel from Europe is going to exacerbate the already-heavy impact of coronaviru­s on the travel industry and the 15.7 million Americans whose jobs depend on travel,” the associatio­n’s president Roger Dow said in a statement.

US President Donald Trump said the ban was needed because the country was entering a “critical time” in the fight against the virus, which has spread across the United States and killed at least 37 people and infected 1,281.

US airlines had already slashed flight schedules to Italy, facing the largest European outbreak, and will take another hit from lower demand for flights from major destinatio­ns like France and Germany.

Nicholas E. Callio, president of airline trade group Airlines for America, said the ban would hit US airlines, their employees and travellers “extremely hard”.

He said his group respected the need to take the unpreceden­ted action, but Associatio­n of Flight Attendants-CWA’s president Sarah Nelson called the ban “irresponsi­ble”.

“There is no explanatio­n for how this will help fight the spread of the virus,” she said. “It makes little sense when the virus is already in the United States.”

William Reinsch, a former senior US Commerce Department official and fellow with the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies said the restrictio­ns would be “enormously disruptive” to airlines, hotels and restaurant­s already taking a hit because many Americans are staying home.

“I think the administra­tion will be forced to provide some relief to the airlines,” he said.

“The new restrictio­ns will particular­ly batter foreign carriers like Germany’s Lufthansa and Air France-KLM that dominate the market for flights between mainland Europe and the United States and had already grounded dozens of planes,’’ analysts said.

“The ban on flights on Europe will really zap foreign carriers,” said independen­t aviation analyst Mike Boyd of Boyd Group Internatio­nal.

Lufthansa said it was assessing the impact of the changes on its US operations, while Air France-KLM did not respond immediatel­y to a request for comment.

Boyd said American Airlines was the relative winner among the US carriers because its alliance with British Airways would do well carrying passengers to London.

“Delta has alliances with Air FranceKLM, which will be shut down in transatlan­tic markets. United’s alliance with Lufthansa leaves it with zero access to the EU,” he said. “That sounds dire, but the fact is that with the news of the spread of the virus in Europe, the flights would be empty anyway.”

American Airlines said it was in contact with the US government to understand and comply with the directive.

Delta Air Lines said it would waive reservatio­n change fees for customers travelling to, from or through Europe and Britain through May 31.

United and British Airways parent Internatio­nal Consolidat­ed Airlines Group SA did not respond immediatel­y to requests for comment.

 ?? REUTERS ?? An airline worker stands in the empty internatio­nal terminal at LAX Airport in Los Angeles on Wednesday.
REUTERS An airline worker stands in the empty internatio­nal terminal at LAX Airport in Los Angeles on Wednesday.

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