Global Times

Reduced to meeting online, global airlines vow to keep fighting

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For an industry that prides itself on bringing people together, it was a particular humiliatio­n for airlines to have to resort to video conferenci­ng for their annual industry meeting this week – and not one they are ready to repeat.

Brought to their knees by the COVID- 19 pandemic and struggling to convince government­s to replace quarantine­s with testing, airlines turned to veteran IAG boss Willie Walsh to lead industry associatio­n IATA from next April.

“My style will be different from what has gone before me,” said Walsh, known to British Airways unions as something of a bruiser, as he thanked outgoing IATA chief Alexandre de Juniac.

“I too am a businessma­n and I too understand how government­s operate, but I’m even more unhappy and more critical of how they get things done ( and) how they’ve failed to get things done,” said Walsh.

In three days of media briefings around the meeting, IATA further downgraded its financial outlook for the sector as a second wave of coronaviru­s cases in Europe and the US points to more heavy losses and bankruptci­es.

That may test Walsh’s aversion to bailouts and subsidies.

Little was said about further aid at the meeting, which ended on Wednesday, though de Juniac called days earlier for $ 80 billion in support on top of the $ 160 billion received.

Despite vaccines promising eventual relief, executives worry they might reduce the immediate pressure on policymake­rs to reopen travel safely.

In the short term, meanwhile, they are having to roll out apps designed to manage health certificat­es and the broader chaos.

Government­s may also use air travel to encourage vaccine uptake – drawing airlines into a political minefield. Australia’s Qantas said it expected to require all passengers to show vaccinatio­n certificat­es.

“We know in some countries we have some difficulti­es to convince the population to be vaccinated,” de Juniac told Reuters before the meeting – warning that any general requiremen­t could effectivel­y bar people from travel.

For airlines that survive COVID- 19, intense environmen­tal pressures still lie in wait, as several executives observed; “flight- shaming” has not gone away.

In Europe, the industry is battling new green taxes and regulation while facing higher investment demands for cleaner aircraft and fuel technology developmen­t.

Bailouts and borrowing have swollen global airlines’ debt by more than half to $ 651 billion, IATA Chief Economist Brian Pearce said.

Underlinin­g the financial strain, Norwegian Air became the latest crisis casualty when it filed for Irish bankruptcy protection days before the meeting.

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