Eastern Eye (UK)

Heathrow sees loss of £2bn

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HEATHROW airport dived into a pre-tax loss of £2 billion last year, a result that “underlines the devastatin­g impact of Covid-19 on aviation”, it said last Wednesday (24).

The loss reflected a 73-per cent plunge in passenger numbers, Heathrow said in a statement. The airport, one of the world’s busiest hubs, recorded a pre-tax profit of £546 million in 2019.

Heathrow chief executive John Holland-Kaye, who said passenger levels shrunk in 2020 to levels last seen in the 1970s, voiced optimism for the year ahead with Britain vaccinatin­g millions of adults and preparing to exit its virus lockdown.

“We can be hopeful for 2021, with Britain on the cusp of becoming the first country in the world to safely resume internatio­nal travel and trade at scale,” he said. “Getting aviation moving again will save thousands of jobs and reinvigora­te the economy.”

Heathrow last year had 22 million passengers compared with 81 million in 2019.

More than half of the 22 million travelled in the first two months of last year, before the pandemic took hold and government­s worldwide implemente­d national lockdowns.

Heathrow’s revenue meanwhile tumbled 62 per cent to £1.2 billion in 2020, while cargo volumes slid 28 per cent.

Heathrow said it has £3.9 billion of liquidity, enough to see it through until 2023.

The airport’s last financial year was notable also owing to the Supreme Court ruling that it could build a third runway.

The court in December struck down a Court of Appeal ruling that the UK government had failed to take into account climate change commitment­s when in 2018 it approved the new runway. Heathrow said it remains “focused on decarbonis­ing aviation”.

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