Oman Daily Observer

Unpreceden­ted 66% drop in air passengers last year: IATA

-

PARIS: Global air passenger traffic plunged by an unpreceden­ted 66 per cent in 2020 owing to travel restrictio­ns imposed during the Covid-19 pandemic, an industry group said on Wednesday.

The Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) also warned that new, more transmissi­ble variants of the coronaviru­s could hurt prospects for a recovery this year.

Given that travel restrictio­ns have been applied mostly to internatio­nal travel, domestic passenger traffic fared better, falling by 49 per cent, compared with 76 per cent for foreign passenger traffic.

Travel restrictio­ns imposed during the first wave of the pandemic caused global passenger traffic to reach just five per cent of its normal level, with airlines parking planes on runways because no other space was available.

“Last year was a catastroph­e. There is no other way to describe it,” an IATA statement quoted Director General Alexandre de Juniac as saying.

“What recovery there was over the Northern hemisphere summer season stalled in autumn and the situation turned dramatical­ly worse over the year-end holiday season, as more severe travel restrictio­ns were imposed in the face of new outbreaks and new strains of

Covid-19.”

IATA chief economist Brian Pearce told a video news briefing: “Overall, global passengers kilometres flown were down two thirds, this is the biggest shock the industry of air travel has ever experience­d.”

IATA, which represents 290 airlines, did not formally lower its outlook for a pickup in traffic this year thanks to a global rollout of vaccines, but warned that the emergence of new variants of the virus clouded the forecast.

And “we begin 2021, which we still expect to be a year of recovery, from a very low point,” Pearce noted.

The associatio­n officially expects traffic to increase by 50 per cent from last years levels, but that would still represent just half of the result seen in 2019.

And “the proliferat­ion of restrictio­ns on travel that we have seen since the beginning of the year could make even that modest outlook very challengin­g,” de Juniac told the press briefing.

“We are eager to work with government­s as partners to understand what the benchmarks and conditions will be for a decision to give people back their freedom of movement,” he added.

One relative bright spot last year came from air freight, which declined by a relatively modest 10.6 per cent from the 2019 level as measured in cargo tonnekilom­etres, or CTKS.

Overall, global passengers kilometres flown were down two thirds, this is the biggest shock the industry of air travel has ever experience­d

BRIAN PEARCE IATA chief economist

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman