New Era

Calls for urgent interventi­on to save aviation jobs

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GENEVA/LONDON - The Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) and the Internatio­nal Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) issued a joint statement calling for urgent government interventi­on to prevent an employment catastroph­e in the aviation industry.

Estimates from the Air Transport Action Group suggest some 4.8 million aviation workers’ jobs are at risk as a result of air travel demand falling more than 75% (August 2020 compared to August 2019). The impact of Covid-19 related border restrictio­ns and quarantine measures has effectivel­y closed down the aviation industry, grounding planes and leaving infrastruc­ture and aircraft manufactur­ing capacity idle.

The IATA and the ITF request to government­s includes calls to provide continued financial support for the aviation industry and to safely re-open borders without quarantine by implementi­ng a globally harmonised system of predepartu­re Covid-19 testing.

“Av i a t i on faces an unpreceden­ted employment catastroph­e. Airlines have cut costs to the bone, but have just 8.5 months of cash left under current conditions. Tens of thousands of jobs have already been lost, and unless government­s provide more financial relief, these are likely to increase to the hundreds of thousands. Aviation plays an essential role connecting nations and carrying essential cargo, and it is in government­s’ own interests to offer further financial aid to keep the industry viable. But more importantl­y, government­s need to work together to safely re- open borders. That means putting in place a global scheme for testing passengers for Covid-19. With that in place, quarantine can be removed and passengers can have the confidence to fly again,” said Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s Director General and CEO.

“The global aviation industry is in a state of prolonged crisis. By the end of the year, almost 80% of wage replacemen­t schemes will run out, without urgent interventi­on from government­s we will witness the biggest jobs crisis the industry has ever seen. But the catastroph­ic jobs crisis can be avoided with a clear a coordinate­d strategy built on relief, recovery and reform.

The world’s aviation workers are calling on government­s to act now, deliver the financial support that will protect their jobs and to commit to working with trade unions and employers to support the industry’s long-term recovery. The aviation workforce is a skilled workforce that has been, and will continue to be, vital to nations’ Covid response and recovery. If government­s fail to act and support aviation, not only will they hurt the industry, the impacts will be hard felt by society at large,” said Stephen Cotton, ITF’s General Secretary.

In addition to re-opening borderswit­htestingan­dfinancial support, the organisati­ons also called for government­s to developaro­admapforlo­ng-term industry recovery including investment in workforce retraining and upskilling, and in green technologi­es, especially sustainabl­e aviation fuels.

“The ability and speed that countries recover from Covid- 19, is closely linked to the recovery of global air connectivi­ty,” said the joint statement.

“Government interventi­on and investment therefore must not just provide support for the air transport industry now but also to ensure that it is fit for purpose and able to support the world’s return to normality from the pandemic.”

 ?? Photo: Contribute­d ?? Ready for take- off… Tens of thousands of global aviation jobs have already been lost.
Photo: Contribute­d Ready for take- off… Tens of thousands of global aviation jobs have already been lost.

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