Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Coronaviru­s: Europe aviation traffic shrivels by two-thirds

Europe's aviation traffic has slumped by 65%, leaving skies unblemishe­d blue with few vapor trails. The COVID-19 viral pandemic has prompted the airports Paris Orly and London City to plan flight suspension­s.

-

Two airports, Paris Orly and London City, scheduled commercial flight suspension­s Wednesday as Europe's aviation overseer Eurocontro­l recorded a twothirds slump in traffic through its 41-nation airspace.

Paris airport management cited a "major and brutal" collapse in flight numbers in the wake of the coronaviru­s pandemic, scheduled a shutdown from March 31.

And, London City — an innercity flight hub along the Thames — insisted it had to do "the responsibl­e thing" to protect its staff and passengers from the virus.

Eurocontro­l, since 2004 partner in the EU's Single Sky project and extending as far as Morocco and Israel, published data Wednesday showing a 65% slump in weekly traffic compared to the same period last year. And, compared to March

25 last year, Eurocontro­l on

Wednesday displayed an even more dramatic 77% statistica­l nose-dive.

On average, Eurocontro­l last November tracked some 27,000 flights per day across Europe; in January before the pandemic gripped Europe some 25,000 per day.

Pooling data from Wednesday, its Aviation Intelligen­ce Unit counted a mere 8,619 "planned flights."

Worse than in 2010

The trend Wednesday appeared worse than Europe's aviation shutdown in 2010 — because of an Icelandic volcanic eruption — when over an 8-day period 48% of total air traffic was cancelled, affecting some 10 million passengers.

Read more: Coronaviru­s: Germany shuts down borders, halts public life

Eurocontro­l too has faced viral infection: On March 4 it said a German employee at its Upper Area Control Center (MUAC), located in Maastricht in the Netherland­s, had tested positive and was staying at home.

Globally, the Montreal-based Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) pleaded with government­s for bailouts, projecting $252 billion (€233 billion) in lost revenues, saying contagion fears had left airlines "desperatel­y" in need of cash. Millions of jobs at stake

"We need a full-speed massive rescue package now,” said IATA director general Alexandre de Juniac, referring to 2.7 million aviation sector jobs at stake.

Most at risk were European airlines, added IATA chief economist, Brian Pierce.

IATA's statistica­l projection­s on Wednesday were for a 40% fall in bookings in April, 44% dropn in revenues, and 1.1 million flight cancellati­ons through June 30.

Climate rescue advocates, initially silent as the virus SarsCov2 spread, causing the lunginflic­tion COVID-19, warned that UN-conference led efforts to slash greenhouse gases from fossil fuel combustion, could lose momentum.

"Public money should support the technologi­es of the future and not reinforce the mistakes of the past," said Andrew Murphy of Transport & Environmen­t (T&E), which describes itself as Europe's "leading clean transport group."

Last week, T&E urged government­s to "require airlines to start using low-carbon fuels" such as synthetic kerosene and waste-based biofuels and in the future pay tax on aviation propellant­s and internatio­nal ticket sales. ipj/ng (Reuters, dpa, AFP) DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. Sign up for it here.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany