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Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on commercial air transport

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on the airline industry due to travel restrictions and a decimation in demand among travelers.

Passengers with full medical hazmat suits disembarking from a repatriation flight operated by Vietnam Airlines. On the ground, there were staffs and crews spraying sanitizing solution onto the deboarded passengers.

Significant reductions in passenger numbers have resulted in flights being cancelled or planes flying empty between airports, which in turn massively reduced revenues for airlines and forced many airlines to lay off employees or declare bankruptcy. Some have attempted to avoid refunding cancelled trips to diminish their losses. Airliner manufacturers and airport operators have also laid off employees.

Only several months into the pandemic, the crisis was already the worst in the aviation industry's history, according to statements made in early 2020 by Airbus' Guillaume Faury,[1] EasyJet's Johan Lundgren,[2] United Airlines' Oscar Munoz,[3] Qantas' Alan Joyce,[4] and media outlets: the Financial Times,[5] The New York Times,[6] and The Independent.[7]

Flight cancellations edit

 
Flight stats by year
  On-time Arrivals

Government regulations in Europe and the United States mandated that airlines refund fares when flights are cancelled, but in many cases airlines have instead offered vouchers or travel credits that must be used by the end of the year. (Some airlines have extended the voucher window to May 2022.) Despite pleas from industry lobbyists to expand the regulations to allow travel credits, the U.S. Department of Transportation has reiterated that airlines are obligated to provide refunds for cancelled flights. Travel vouchers are currently allowed when passengers cancel travel plans due to travel warnings, stay at home orders and other restrictions.[8] In spite of the cancellations, thousands of nearly-empty "ghost flights" continued to fly in order to maintain landing slots.[9]

 
Aviation sector recorded an 80% decrease in flight movements across all geographic regions, including America, Europe, Asia-Pacific and Middle East as of 4 May 2020.[10]
 
Many flights from Hong Kong were cancelled in March 2020 due to the pandemic.

Early March 2020 saw 10% of all flights cancelled compared to 2019. As the pandemic progressed, 40–60% fewer flight movements were recorded in late March with international flights affected the most. By April 2020, over 80% flight movements were restricted across all regions.[10] Research shows that world recovery of passenger demand to pre-COVID-19 levels is estimated to take 2.4 years (recovery by late 2022), with the most optimistic estimate being 2 years (recovery by mid-2022), and the most pessimistic estimate 6 years (recovery in 2026). Large regional differences are detected: the Asia-Pacific has the shortest estimated average recovery time of 2.2 years, followed by North America in 2.5 years, and Europe 2.7 years. For air freight demand, a shorter average world recovery time of 2.2 years is predicted if compared to passenger demand. On the regional level, Europe and North America are comparable with average recovery times of 2.2 years, while the Asia-Pacific is predicted to recover faster in 2.1 years.[11]

In 2022, recovery of travel demand exceeded airlines' ability to hire back pilots and ground staff quickly enough, causing several months of widespread delays and cancellations across the United States[12] and Europe.[13]

Air cargo edit

As passenger flights were cancelled, the cost of sending cargo by air changed rapidly. The cost of sending cargo across the Pacific Ocean tripled by late March 2020.[14]

Adjusted cargo capacity fell by 4.4% in February 2020 while air cargo demand also fell by 9.1%, but the near-halt in passenger traffic cut capacity even deeper as half of global air cargo is carried in passenger jets' bellies. Air freight rates rose as a consequence, from $0.80 per kg for transatlantic cargoes to $2.50–4 per kg, enticing passenger airlines to operate cargo-only flights through the use of preighters, while cargo airlines brought back into service fuel-guzzling stored aircraft, helped by falling oil prices.[15] Passenger airlines were enticed to convert aircraft.[16]

At the end of March 2020, cargo capacity was down by 35% compared to the previous year: North America to Asia Pacific capacity fall by 17% (19% in the opposite direction) Asia-Pacific to Europe was down by 30% (reverse: -32%), intra-Asia was down by 35%. Lagging the capacity reductions, demand was down by 23% in March, resulting in higher freight rates: from China/Hong Kong, between 2 March 2020 and 6 April 2020 +158% to Europe and +90.5% to North America.[17] By May, freight rates from Shanghai were $12/kg to North America, $11/kg to Europe.[18]

The cargo shortage may evaporate if the global economic crisis depresses demand: the WTO forecast a global trade contraction of 13–32% in 2020.[19]

International mail between many countries stopped completely, either due to suspension of domestic service or lack of transportation.[20]

Business aviation edit

Business aviation was less affected than airline traffic, in that top executives' travel is often considered essential. London Biggin Hill Airport reported traffic to be around 30% of 2019 levels, with transatlantic traffic strong.[21] Once lockdown restrictions are eased, business aviation has an opportunity to capture premium passengers who might previously have chosen airlines, but who may prefer the social distancing afforded by a private jet.[22]

United States air charter travel strongly increased in February and March as airlines slashed schedules, making commercial flights increasingly unpredictable; however, some charter operators such as JetSuite subsequently saw a drastic drop in business as widespread stay-at-home orders took effect in April 2020.[23]

By sector edit

Airlines edit

 
KLM Boeing 777-200ERs parked on Schiphol runway during the crisis

On 5 March 2020, the International Air Transport Association (IATA) estimated that the airline industry could lose between US$63 to 113 billion of revenues due to the reduced number of passengers.[24][25] IATA had previously estimated revenue losses of around US$30 billion two weeks before their 5 March estimate.[26] By 17 March, IATA had stated that its 5 March estimate was "outdated", and that airlines would require $200 billion in bailouts to survive the crisis.[27] IATA further revised their revenue loss estimate on 24 March to be $252 billion globally, a 44 percent drop.[28] Another further estimate was published on 14 April, which forecasted a revenue drop of $314 billion (55 percent) and a traffic drop of 48 percent in passenger count for 2020.[29]

Due to the sudden and large losses of revenue, airlines began to hold out against refunding cancelled flights and tickets to conserve cash, despite government regulations. In Europe, airlines had successfully negotiated to defer some $1.2 billion in air traffic control charges.[30]

Oliver Wyman reported that Asian airlines reduced their available seat miles by 23 percent in March 2020.[31] In Europe, the impact of the outbreak is expected to accelerate corporate consolidation in the airline industry.[32] According to consultancy CAPA Centre for Aviation, most airlines would be bankrupted by the end of May 2020.[33]

Air travel demand rose 2.4 percent year-on-year in January 2020, the lowest it has been since the April 2010 eruptions of Eyjafjallajökull, though travel disruptions due to coronavirus only began in late January.[34] By March, the number of flights had plummeted, with about 280,000 flights reported between 24 and 30 March 2020 compared to around 780,000 in a similar period the previous year.[35] Despite a lack of passengers, regulations regarding flight slots initially compelled British airlines to fly empty planes to European airports to avoid losing their slots.[36] Fuel prices dropping (due to an oil price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia) by around a quarter could not compensate for the fall in demand.[37]

Analysts expect airlines to reduce the size of their fleets as a result of the downturn, and point out that this could be done either by modernising fleets—hastening the retirement of older aircraft and maintaining planned deliveries of new, more fuel-efficient models—or by retaining older planes and reducing capital expenditure on new aircraft.[38]

By mid-April 2020, the inactive fleet ballooned to almost 14,400, over two thirds of the 22,000 mainline passenger airliners, leaving 7,635 in operation stood: predominantly in Europe, where less than 15% are operating, than in North America (45%) or Asia (49%); and affecting narrow-body aircraft (37%) less than wide-body aircraft (27%).[39] Consequently, demand for aircraft storage increased to the point where runways and taxiways in normally busy airports such as Frankfurt Airport and Atlanta Airport were closed to make room for storage.[40]

In April 2020, global passenger capacity is down 91%; the ICAO anticipates 1.2 billion fewer travellers by September 2020 compared to a typical year, a revenue fall of $160–253 billion for the first nine months of 2020.[41] While European airlines owe $10 billion for cancelled flights, IATA is predicting a 55% fall in revenue compared to 2019, a $89 billion hit, costing $452 billion on the wider economy.[42] Boeing anticipates passenger traffic recovering in two to three years to 2019 levels, but expects production to take longer.[43]

The Airports Council International estimates 4.6 billion fewer passengers in 2020, down from 9.1 billion in 2019. The IATA expects RPKs to be down by half from 2019 except in North America, down by 36%; for $314 billion lower revenues, a 55% fall. The association forecast air travel to lag economic recovery by up to two years: air traffic in 2021 would still be down by 24% from 2019, and a return to 2019 levels would happen by 2023–2025.[44]

By June 2020, the IATA was projecting a collective net loss of $84.3 billion yearly for Airlines, worse than the $30 billion loss during the financial crisis of 2008-2009, and projects that income will remain negative through 2021.[45]

By mid-April 2020, 14,500 mainline airliners were stored, leaving 7,400 active: one third of the whole fleet, even one fifth for European carriers; down from 20,200 in active service and 1,800 in storage before. By mid-June, 10,500 were still stored while 11,500 were active, with an average daily utilisation down by 35% from 2019; led by Asia-Pacific airlines with almost 75% of the fleet flying, then Europe with one third still stored, then North America with a 50/50 split.[46] Major airliner deliveries dropped from a typical 90 to 100 aircraft a month to an average of less than 40 in the first half of 2020.[47]

As traffic may not return to pre-pandemic levels until 2024, older, less fuel-efficient, and higher-maintenance aircraft retirement is accelerating, including the Boeing 777, Airbus A330 and Airbus A380. They are replaced with newer Airbus A350 and Boeing 787s, as a surplus of used aircraft is expected until 2030.[48]

By the third quarter of 2020, China Southern became the first of the large Chinese carriers to return to profitability, while Air China and China Eastern managed to narrow their losses, helped by domestic travel recovery by September after traffic bottomed out in February—but international demand is still in the doldrums.[49] By May 2021, 7,850 airliners were still in storage, down from a peak of 16,522 in April 2020.[50] As US traffic recovers, networks are evolving towards more point-to-point transit to leisure destinations, bypassing major airline hubs while business travel is still lagging.[51]

The aggregation of the 66 largest airlines with public financials[a] showed a revenue falling by 60% from $658Bn in 2019 to $262Bn in 2020, while net profits went from $17bn to a $140bn loss, a $157bn decrease.[52]

By the end of 2021, the global airline industry had returned to 79% of its pre-Covid size according to Airline Business, using an index from 13 of the largest airline groups: 86% of the workforce size, 96% of the fleet size, 71% of the revenue and 62% of the passenger numbers.[53]

In the final quarter of 2022, the same index was at 105% of the 2019 activity: 84% of passenger numbers with higher fares due to strong demand and constrained capacity, 97% of the fleet size, 92% of the employee number.[54]

Sun et al. 's study notes that during the pandemic the International Air Transport Association (IATA) recommends a distance of 1–2 m between passengers at all times. Therefore, in order to maintain appropriate social distancing, airlines in various countries have responded by adjusting the order and method of boarding. For exmple, Delta Air Lines' boarding and seating rules are for middle seats to be empty and rows to be moved from back to front and United Airlines' rules are from back to front, Business class last. Although airlines have adopted a rear-to-front boarding process, studies have shown that this method of boarding is slow and it does not necessarily reduce social proximity.[55]

Aerospace manufacturers edit

As demand plummeted, values fell 2% to 22% between January and May 2020 for five-year old aircraft, and lease rates by 4% to 26%.[56] By August, values fell further by 9% to 25% since January, and lease rates by 12% to 45%.[57] By November, market values of 20-year-old large single-aisles had fallen by 22% to 29% while their lease rates had fallen by 44% to 50%, and market values of 20-year-old widebody twins had fallen by 15 to 35% while their lease rates had fallen by 20 to 44%.[58]

As the pandemic reduced demand for new jets in early 2020, manufacturers trimmed airliner production rates and were producing aircraft they are unable to deliver. Airbus cut its monthly production from 60 to 40 A320s, from 4.5 to two A330s, and from nine to six A350s. Boeing reduced its output per month from 14 to six 787s, from five to two 777s, and 737 Max production was already halted, as a rate of 31 per month was targeted by early 2022. Bloomberg was expecting Airbus and Boeing to deliver 30 jets monthly each in 2021, mostly for single-aisles.[59]

In 2020, deliveries were down by more than 50% compared to 2019, after 10 years of growth.[60] Cirium forecasts a traffic recovery towards 2024 and a 3.3% growth per year over 20-years, needing 43,315 airliner deliveries.[60] The projection is 8% less than before the crisis, while retirements are accelerated.[60]

  • Airbus reduced its wing production on factories in Broughton, Filton and Bremen, and reduced working hours in the sites. Its French and Spanish sites suspended production for several days before a partial resumption on 23 March.[61] Monthly production was cut to four A220s, forty A320s, two A330s and six A350s.[62] Airbus delivered 122 aircraft in the first quarter, 40 fewer than in the previous year, and 60 could not be handed over due to travel restrictions. Airliner revenues were down 22% to €7.5 billion, earnings dropped by 82% to €57 million, and their adjusted EBIT was down 59% to €191 million. The company free cash flow was a negative €8 billion, including the €3.6 billion bribery penalties, similar to the negative €4.3 billion of the previous year without. For the first quarter, Airbus' total adjusted EBIT was halved to €281 million, and it made a net loss of €481 million (compared to a €40 million profit in the previous year). In 2020, capital expenditure should be reduced by €700 million to €1.9 billion.[63]
  • Boeing froze hiring and reportedly laid off employees due to a large number of cancellations, which outpaced new orders in February 2020.[64] On 11 March, it was revealed that Boeing was to exercise its whole US$13.8 billion loan facility (which it secured in February). Prior to the pandemic, Boeing's business had been impacted by groundings of its 737 MAX aircraft.[65] By 7 April, Boeing had indefinitely suspended production at Boeing South Carolina and Puget Sound, Washington, completely halting the assembly of its commercial aircraft.[66] On 21 April, Boeing announced a management structure overhaul.[67] On 27 May, it announced plans to lay off 12,000 employees, while it reported zero new orders in April 2020.[68] In October, it announced plans to lay off thousands more employees through the following year, with the expectation that it would end 2021 with 19% fewer employees than its pre-pandemic workforce.[69]
  • Bombardier on 26 March 2020 announced a suspension of most Canadian production in Ontario (for 2 weeks) and Quebec (until 13 April), in addition to halting production in Northern Ireland. 12,400 Bombardier employees in Canada (70 percent of the workforce) were furloughed.[70]
  • CFM International deliveries of CFM LEAP engines across the first nine months of 2020 fell to 622 from 1,316 in the same period in 2019, and 123 CFM56s against 327, while Leap fleet cycles were down 15% year-on-year and CFM56 cycles were 48% lower.[71]
  • Embraer reported deferment of orders of its commercial aircraft.[72] It also suspended its financial guidance for 2020.[73]
  • General Electric announced on 23 March 2020 that it would cut one tenth of employees in its jet engine arm, amounting to around 2,500 employees, in addition to furloughing around half of its maintenance and repair staff.[74]
  • Mitsubishi in May 2020 halved the budget of its SpaceJet programme and repatriated all work from the US to Japan.[75] In October 2020 it announced a further budget reduction and put almost all SpaceJet activities on hold.[76]
  • Rolls-Royce planned to cut 9,000 jobs, mainly in its civil aerospace division, and mainly affecting its UK site at Derby.[77]
  • Textron Inc., the parent company of Textron Aviation and Bell Helicopter, announced a 1,950 jobs layoff.[78]
  • United Aircraft Corporation, Russian Industry and Trade Minister said "is quite balanced as a production unit". Because recovery is quicker in Russia than abroad, the production program is drafted for 2020–2021. Also, the market will require up to 1,500 new civil jets within the next 15 to 20 years, adding that there is scope for optimism in the domestic industry.[79]

On 25 April 2020, Boeing announced it had terminated the planned Boeing–Embraer joint venture after the 24 April delay expired, attributing it to Embraer's failure to meet conditions.[80] Later the same day, Embraer asserted that it had satisfied the conditions for consolidation to proceed, and that it would seek compensation for Boeing's allegedly wrongful termination of the deal.[81] Aviation analyst Scott Hamilton believed the collapse in demand for airliners caused by the pandemic and the resulting cash constraints motivated Boeing's defection, along with the desire to avoid the perception that it was using government pandemic relief funds for foreign investment.[82]

Airports edit

 
Parked planes in May 2020 at Victorville, California; Teruel, Spain; Lourdes, France; Alice Springs, Australia
 
Queues to the security control at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol in June 2022
  • From March 2020, various United States airlines stored hundreds of disused aircraft at Southern California Logistics Airport[83][84] and Roswell International Air Center.[85]
  • Runways and taxiways at Frankfurt Airport, Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport, and Tulsa International Airport were closed and used as aircraft storage areas by Lufthansa, Delta Air Lines, and American Airlines respectively.[86]
  • Ciudad Real International Airport and Madrid Airport benefited from medical equipment cargo corridors from China.[87][88][89][importance?]
  • By mid-April 2020, Airports Council International (ACI) observed a 95% fall in traffic in 18 airports in major aviation markets in Asia-Pacific and the Middle East.[90]
  • On 27 April 2020, Westchester County Airport closed to airlines for about a month for a major runway repaving project, which was originally scheduled to be undertaken in stages late at night over the span of four months. The decision to close and expedite the project was made because the number of daily flights had fallen drastically. This was the first total closure of a United States commercial airport for pandemic-related reasons.[91]
  • Various airlines from outside Australia stored aircraft at Alice Springs Airport.[92]
  • On 5 May 2020, ACI World estimated that in 2020, passenger traffic worldwide would amount to less than half of what was previously projected for the year.[93]
  • UK airports axed expansion plans valued at £1 billion.[94]
  • In May 2020, Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (DFW) was the world's busiest airport measured by aircraft movements despite significantly lower traffic than normal. American Airlines diminished point-to-point routes and instead sent flights through its DFW hub, creating traffic volumes surpassing those at the normally busier O'Hare International Airport and Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport by substantial margins.[95]
  • In May 2020, Salt Lake City International Airport reported that an in-progress redevelopment project would be sped up by as much as two years by the pandemic. Lower passenger numbers meant that larger areas of the airport could be closed much earlier than expected for demolition and renovation, saving up to $300 million for the project overall.[96]
  • Orly Airport in Paris was closed to commercial traffic from 1 April to 25 June 2020.[citation needed]
  • In Europe, some of the airports that saw the most parked airliners during the pandemic were Ciudad Real International Airport, Madrid Airport, Teruel Airport and Istanbul Airport.[97]
  • In late October 2020, ACI Europe stated that 193 (mostly regional) of the 740 airports in Europe were risking bankruptcy.[98]
  • Coronavirus related travel restrictions imposed in 2020 reduced traffic by 70% at the Dubai International Airport. The number of travellers through this tourism hub dropped to 25.9 million in 2020.[99]
  • As compared to Q1 of 2020, Dubai International Airport's passenger traffic has plunged 67.8% to reach 5.75 million in Q1 of 2021. Along with the main airports in Tokyo, Los Angeles, London, Chicago and Paris, Dubai has also dropped out of the top 10 rankings for total passengers last year.[100]
  • On 17 July 2021, ACI World estimated that global passenger traffic in 2020 was reduced by over 5.9 billion passengers, a loss of 62.3% of what was estimated for the year.[101] In 2021, the loss is estimated at just over 5 billion passengers, representing 50.9% of the total estimated for the year.[101]
  • In Summer 2022, many airports experienced extraordinary long delays and a large number of cancelled flights, as a consequence of the pandemic. In particular, at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, the pandemic led to recession of air traffic and subsequently to the shortage of security staff and walkout of baggage handlers, which resulted in hours long queues.[102]

Regulators edit

  • In March 2020, the United States Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) announced that it would not take enforcement action against pilots whose medical certificates expired between 31 March and 30 June, due to the difficulty of scheduling appointments with certified Aviation Medical Examiners. In June, the FAA expected that the exception would be extended.[103]
  • The FAA announced on 23 April 2020 a reduction in the operating hours of over 100 control towers and terminal radar approach control facilities, citing a drop in air traffic of as much as 96%. Pilots were advised that certain air traffic control services and instrument landing system approaches may be periodically unavailable.[104]

Government edit

  • On 8 June 2020, the Austrian conservativegreen coalition government concluded a support deal for Austrian Airlines (a subsidiary of Lufthansa) for €150 million in taxpayer grants, and €300 million in banking loans that are to be paid back. This was significantly less than expected (Austrian Airlines had applied for €767 million), and came under the stringent conditions (some of which also applied to other airline companies operating in Austria) to restrict short-distance airline operations, to ban cheap tickets below €40 and include a €12 environmental tax to each ticket, and to half its CO2 emissions by 2030.[105][106]

Other organizations edit

  • Many United States general aviation social events and fly-ins scheduled for the spring of 2020 were cancelled or postponed, including Sun 'n Fun[107] and several conducted by the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association.[108]
  • On 1 May 2020, citing uncertainty about COVID-19 social restrictions imposed by the state of Wisconsin, the Experimental Aircraft Association canceled EAA AirVenture Oshkosh for 2020.[109]
  • Air charter company JetSuite ceased flight operations on 15 April 2020 and its parent company filed for bankruptcy on 28 April 2020; CEO Alex Wilcox attributed the company's collapse to a 90% drop in business due to widespread stay-at-home orders.[110]
  • Travel technology company Sabre Corporation furloughed one third of its workforce on 23 April 2020, citing an 81% drop in revenue due to drastically reduced airline and other travel bookings. Sabre had previously cut salaries by 20%, suspended 401(k) pension contributions, cut various other expenses, and obtained a US$1.1 billion loan, but these steps reportedly failed to offset losses.[23]

By country edit

 
Change in jet fuel consumption by country relative to 2019
 
Beijing Capital International Airport, empty
 
A nearly empty flight from Beijing to Los Angeles
  • Argentina: The government suspended domestic flights in March 2020 during the beginning of the pandemic in the country and imposed restriction of international flights for several months. In June 2021, the government imposed a daily limit of 600 entries per day to prevent the entry of the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant.[111] On 3 July 2021, domestic flights resumed between some cities in the country.[112]
  • Canada: Canadians were advised to avoid non-essential travel on 13 March 2020, while Canadian border was closed except for Canadian citizens and permanent residents on 16 March (Canada–United States border closed later on 18 March).[113] Essential travel is exempted, and international travellers must enter through Calgary International Airport, Vancouver International Airport, Toronto Pearson International Airport, or Montréal–Trudeau International Airport with mandatory 14 days' quarantine.[114] The border closure has been extended multiple times and remained closed until at least 21 August.[115] Most transborder flights have been cancelled since late March due to the lack in demand.[116] The prolonged international travel ban resulted in Air Canada's loss of C$1.75 billion in August and they have since urged for easing in travel restrictions.[117]
  • China: Roughly two thirds of international flights to and from China were cancelled in February 2020. Flights between Japan and China saw a 60 percent reduction in traffic, while the US and China saw a reduction of 86 percent.[118] Two thirds of domestic flights within China were similarly cancelled, numbering around 10,000 flights daily, while the ticket prices for remaining flights dropped—South China Morning Post reported that a seat for a three-hour flight between Shanghai and Chongqing cost as little as 29 Yuan (US$4.1). Passenger traffic between 25 January and 14 February dropped by 75 percent compared to the same period in 2019.[119] Since 23 March 2020, all international passenger flights bound for Beijing are diverted to twelve designated first points of entry, under the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC)'s guideline.[120] Since 29 March, all international flights to and from China are reduced, with flight limit.[121] Since 4 June 2020, CAAC decided to allow more foreign airlines to operate passenger flights to China from 8 June, while "circuit-breaker" measures would also be implemented.[122]
  • Colombia: Colombia ceased all commercial air travel at the beginning of the pandemic. Domestic flights resumed gradually beginning on 20 July 2020, Colombia's Independence Day, with a single flight of less than 200 km.[123] El Dorado International Airport in Bogotá reopened on 1 September with 38 flights.[124]
  • Denmark: Passenger figures went down by around 99% in April 2020 compared to April 2019. This affected both domestic and international flights. Denmark closed its border to all tourism and other non-priority travel. Two noticeable cases were Aarhus Airport which had no passengers in April, and Bornholm Airport which had 16% as many passengers in April 2020 compared to 2019. On most domestic air routes car travel is possible with 3 to 4 hours' drive time, but Bornholm is an island where ferry and air is the only possibilities. See also: List of the busiest airports in the Nordic countries#2020 coronavirus statistics
  • Fiji: In April 2020, Fiji Airways suspended all international flights and the main international airport in Nadi was closed.[125] As a result, the national airline terminated more than 700 employees.[126][127] On 26 May, the government issued guarantees in support of FJ$450 million (US$208 million) worth of initiatives aimed at strengthening Fiji Airway's cash reserves.[128]
  • India: Indian airlines are estimated to report a loss of US$600 million (not including state-owned Air India) for the January–March quarter. The government of India is planning a rescue package for the aviation industry for as much as ₹120 billion (US$1.6 billion).[129]
  • Indonesia: On 2 April 2020, Indonesia banned foreigners from entering their borders. Starting on 24 April, all passenger flights, except those carrying medical personnel/supplies or repatriating Indonesian citizens from abroad/foreigners from Indonesia, were banned.[130] After implementing health guidelines, the ban on passenger flights was lifted on 7 May, starting with the resumptions of domestic passenger flights.[131]
  • Italy: Due to the outbreak and the ensuing national lockdown, thousands of flights to and from Italy were cancelled.[132]
  • Mauritius: As from March 2020 all international flights to Mauritius was suspended. The national carrier, Air Mauritius entered voluntary administration after making losses for quite years.[133]
  • Nepal: From March 2020 to prevent the importation and spread of coronavirus infection, all aircraft including domestic and international (with the exception of humanitarian flights) were banned arriving in Nepal.[134]
  • Pakistan: The Government of Pakistan had allowed domestic flights to resume, following suspension during the COVID-19 pandemic on 16 May.[135] Six days later, Pakistan International Airlines Flight 8303 crashed in Karachi from Lahore.[136]
  • Philippines: The National Economic and Development Authority projects a loss of at least 1.2 million tourist arrivals assuming that the pandemic persists by June 2020.[137]
  • South Africa: South African Airways had been placed in bankruptcy protection in December 2019. However, with the pandemic leading to the complete grounding of all flights, and the government refusing to make more finance available, the airline is heading for a winding down process, or liquidation, depending on the outcome of negotiations with unions and workers on retrenchments.[138]
  • Turkmenistan: From March 2020 to prevent the importation and spread of coronavirus infection, all aircraft arriving in Turkmenistan from abroad are redirected to the Turkmenabat International Airport.[139] Passengers arriving from outside of Turkmenistan are carried screened for signs of active infection, in particular, body temperature is measured. Visitors who are flagged during screening are transported to an allocated hospital. The airport medical center is equipped with personal protective equipment. After passing a medical examination, the plane, together with passengers on board, leaves for Ashgabat. Departures from Turkmenistan are carried out from Ashgabat International Airport. Persons authorized solely for diplomatic, official, humanitarian purposes are allowed to enter the territory of Turkmenistan.[140]
  • United Kingdom: On 22 February 2021, UK's PM Boris Johnson announced that leisure travel overseas will not start until 17 May.[141]
  • United States: Multiple airlines waived fees for flight booking changes and cancellations during the coronavirus outbreak following a request from Sen. Richard Blumenthal.[142] Between 20 January and 7 March 2020, stock prices in US airlines decreased by 30 percent.[143] Flight fares for domestic flights also dropped.[144]
On 25 March, the United States Senate passed a bill that would allocate $58 billion in loans and guarantees to aviation-related companies, including $25 billion for passenger carriers and $4 billion for cargo carriers, plus $17 billion for companies "critical to maintaining national security", such as Boeing. The airlines accepting the package would be barred from increasing executive pay, issuing dividends, or buying back shares during the aid period.[145]
On 3 September 2020, the CEO of the lobbying group Airlines for America said "We don't see it [demand] fully rebounding until 2024...Right now, we're fighting for survival."[146]
  • Vietnam: Despite Vietnam's success in containing the epidemic, Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam (CAAV) said the aviation industry is in the worst situation in 60 years of development. Of the 234 Vietnam registered aircraft, more than 200 were grounded while airlines still have to spend hundreds millions dollars to maintain operations such as: aircraft leasing cost, paying for employee, aircraft maintenance and apron parking fee.[147] Vietnam Airlines estimates its 2020 revenues could decline by US$2.1 billion. This has seen as many as 10,000 employees of the national flag carrier, over 50% of its staff strength, taking unpaid leave. Duong Tri Thanh, CEO of Vietnam Airlines stressing that the carrier was going through the hardest time in its history.[148]

Environmental impacts edit

The sharp and lasting decline in planned air travel throughout the pandemic had a beneficial effect of global climate change.[149] The effects of COVID-19 lockdowns were subject of the first quantitative research on large-scale modal shifts and demand reduction in aviation.[150] It illustrated that a significant share of business travel is not necessary[151] and advanced or increased the adoption of various methods and technologies to mitigate air travel demand.[152][153][154][155][156][157]

Travel and virus spread edit

The use of aeroplanes by travelers has been implicated in the spread of the coronavirus.[158] The World Health Organization noted that "Transmission of infection may occur between passengers who are seated in the same area of an aircraft, usually as a result of the infected individual coughing or sneezing or by touch".[159] Amidst the coronavirus pandemic, many airline tickets have been sold at discount[160] and some buyers attended spring break celebrations despite warnings to remain at home.[160] A multitude of young adults have tested positive for the coronavirus upon returning from spring break celebrations; among those from Texas vacationing in Cabo San Lucas were forty-four positive persons.[161]

Although a HEPA filter captures 99.97 percent of airborne particles, it does not account for air that does not go through the filter and many airlines have required passengers to wear masks during the flight.[162] According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, pathogens do not spread easily on flights, but prolonged proximity still presents a danger of infection.[163]

 
Aircraft cabin disinfection

Hazard controls edit

According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, if a person becomes sick on an airplane, proper hazard controls include separating the sick person from others, designating one crew member to serve the sick person, and offering a face mask or asking the sick person to cover their mouth and nose with tissues when coughing or sneezing. Cabin crew should wear disposable medical gloves, and possibly additional personal protective equipment. Disposable items should be disposed of in a biohazard bag, and contaminated surfaces should be cleaned and disinfected afterwards.[164]

Proof of vaccination edit

 
Scott Morrison: "People have the choice of two weeks of quarantine or being vaccinated."[165]

For passengers edit

On 23 November 2020, Qantas announced that the company will ask for proof of COVID-19 vaccination from international travelers. According to Alan Joyce, the firm's CEO, a coronavirus vaccine would become a "necessity" when travelling, "We are looking at changing our terms and conditions to say for international travellers, we will ask people to have a vaccination before they can get on the aircraft."[166] Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison subsequently announced that all international travellers who fly to Australia without proof of a COVID-19 vaccination will be required to quarantine at their own expense.[165] Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews and the CEOs of Melbourne Airport, Brisbane Airport and Flight Centre all supported the Morrison government's "no jab, no fly" policy, with only Sydney Airport's CEO suggesting advanced testing might also be sufficient to eliminate quarantine in the future.[167] The International Air Transport Association (IATA) announced that it was almost finished with developing a digital health pass which states air passengers' COVID-19 testing and vaccination information to airlines and governments.[168]

Korean Air and Air New Zealand were seriously considering mandatory vaccination as well, but would negotiate it with their respective governments.[169] KLM CEO Pieter Elbers responded on 24 November that KLM does not yet have any plans for mandatory vaccination on its flights.[170] Brussels Airlines and Lufthansa said they had no plans yet on requiring passengers to present proof of vaccination before boarding, but Brussels Airport CEO Arnaud Feist agreed with Qantas' policy, stating: "Sooner or later, having proof of vaccination or a negative test will become compulsory."[171] Ryanair announced it would not require proof of vaccination for air travel within the EU, EasyJet stated it would not require any proof at all. The Irish Times commented that a vaccination certificate for flying was quite common in countries around the world for other diseases, such as for yellow fever in many African countries.[172]

 
CommonsPass logo

On 25 November, separately from IATA's digital health pass initiative, five major airlines—United Airlines, Lufthansa, Virgin Atlantic, Swiss International Air Lines, and JetBlue—announced the 1 December 2020 introduction of the CommonPass, which shows the results of passengers' COVID-19 tests. It was designed as an international standard by the World Economic Forum and The Commons Project, and set up in such a way that it could also be used to record vaccination results in the future. It standardises test results and aims to prevent forgery of vaccination records, while storing only limited data on a passenger's phone to safeguard their privacy. The CommonPass had already successfully undergone a trial period in October with United Airlines and Cathay Pacific Airways.[173][174]

On 26 November, the Danish Ministry of Health confirmed that it was working on a COVID-19 "vaccine passport", which would likely not only work as proof of vaccination for air travel, but for other activities such as concerts, private parties and access to various businesses, a perspective welcomed by the Confederation of Danish Industry. The Danish College of General Practitioners also welcomed the project, saying that it doesn't force anyone to vaccinate, but encourages them to do so if they want to enjoy certain privileges in society.[175]

Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney said on 27 November 2020 that, although he "currently has no plans" for a passport vaccination stamp, his government was working on changing the passenger locator form to include proof of PCR negative tests for the coronavirus, and that it was likely to be further adjusted to include vaccination data when a COVID-19 vaccine would become available. Coveney stressed that "We do not want, following enormous efforts and sacrifices from people, to reintroduce the virus again through international travel, which is a danger if it is not managed right."[176]

For employees edit

An August 2021 statement from Delta's CEO revealed that "the average hospital stay for COVID-19 has cost Delta $50,000 per person” and that all of these hospitalized employees were unvaccinated. While Delta did not mandate vaccination, it said that unvaccinated employees enrolled in the company's healthcare plan would be charged $200 per month and would also have to be tested weekly for the virus.[177]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ not included: Air India, Globalia (Air Europa’s parent), Hainan Airlines, LOT Polish Airlines, South African Airways, and Virgin Australia

References edit

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impact, covid, pandemic, commercial, transport, covid, pandemic, significant, impact, airline, industry, travel, restrictions, decimation, demand, among, travelers, passengers, with, full, medical, hazmat, suits, disembarking, from, repatriation, flight, opera. The COVID 19 pandemic has had a significant impact on the airline industry due to travel restrictions and a decimation in demand among travelers Passengers with full medical hazmat suits disembarking from a repatriation flight operated by Vietnam Airlines On the ground there were staffs and crews spraying sanitizing solution onto the deboarded passengers Significant reductions in passenger numbers have resulted in flights being cancelled or planes flying empty between airports which in turn massively reduced revenues for airlines and forced many airlines to lay off employees or declare bankruptcy Some have attempted to avoid refunding cancelled trips to diminish their losses Airliner manufacturers and airport operators have also laid off employees Only several months into the pandemic the crisis was already the worst in the aviation industry s history according to statements made in early 2020 by Airbus Guillaume Faury 1 EasyJet s Johan Lundgren 2 United Airlines Oscar Munoz 3 Qantas Alan Joyce 4 and media outlets the Financial Times 5 The New York Times 6 and The Independent 7 Contents 1 Flight cancellations 2 Air cargo 3 Business aviation 4 By sector 4 1 Airlines 4 2 Aerospace manufacturers 4 3 Airports 4 4 Regulators 4 5 Government 4 6 Other organizations 5 By country 6 Environmental impacts 7 Travel and virus spread 8 Hazard controls 9 Proof of vaccination 9 1 For passengers 9 2 For employees 10 See also 11 Notes 12 ReferencesFlight cancellations edit nbsp Flight stats by year Flight cancellations Flight delays On time Arrivals Government regulations in Europe and the United States mandated that airlines refund fares when flights are cancelled but in many cases airlines have instead offered vouchers or travel credits that must be used by the end of the year Some airlines have extended the voucher window to May 2022 Despite pleas from industry lobbyists to expand the regulations to allow travel credits the U S Department of Transportation has reiterated that airlines are obligated to provide refunds for cancelled flights Travel vouchers are currently allowed when passengers cancel travel plans due to travel warnings stay at home orders and other restrictions 8 In spite of the cancellations thousands of nearly empty ghost flights continued to fly in order to maintain landing slots 9 nbsp Aviation sector recorded an 80 decrease in flight movements across all geographic regions including America Europe Asia Pacific and Middle East as of 4 May 2020 10 nbsp Many flights from Hong Kong were cancelled in March 2020 due to the pandemic Early March 2020 saw 10 of all flights cancelled compared to 2019 As the pandemic progressed 40 60 fewer flight movements were recorded in late March with international flights affected the most By April 2020 over 80 flight movements were restricted across all regions 10 Research shows that world recovery of passenger demand to pre COVID 19 levels is estimated to take 2 4 years recovery by late 2022 with the most optimistic estimate being 2 years recovery by mid 2022 and the most pessimistic estimate 6 years recovery in 2026 Large regional differences are detected the Asia Pacific has the shortest estimated average recovery time of 2 2 years followed by North America in 2 5 years and Europe 2 7 years For air freight demand a shorter average world recovery time of 2 2 years is predicted if compared to passenger demand On the regional level Europe and North America are comparable with average recovery times of 2 2 years while the Asia Pacific is predicted to recover faster in 2 1 years 11 In 2022 recovery of travel demand exceeded airlines ability to hire back pilots and ground staff quickly enough causing several months of widespread delays and cancellations across the United States 12 and Europe 13 Air cargo editAs passenger flights were cancelled the cost of sending cargo by air changed rapidly The cost of sending cargo across the Pacific Ocean tripled by late March 2020 14 Adjusted cargo capacity fell by 4 4 in February 2020 while air cargo demand also fell by 9 1 but the near halt in passenger traffic cut capacity even deeper as half of global air cargo is carried in passenger jets bellies Air freight rates rose as a consequence from 0 80 per kg for transatlantic cargoes to 2 50 4 per kg enticing passenger airlines to operate cargo only flights through the use of preighters while cargo airlines brought back into service fuel guzzling stored aircraft helped by falling oil prices 15 Passenger airlines were enticed to convert aircraft 16 At the end of March 2020 cargo capacity was down by 35 compared to the previous year North America to Asia Pacific capacity fall by 17 19 in the opposite direction Asia Pacific to Europe was down by 30 reverse 32 intra Asia was down by 35 Lagging the capacity reductions demand was down by 23 in March resulting in higher freight rates from China Hong Kong between 2 March 2020 and 6 April 2020 158 to Europe and 90 5 to North America 17 By May freight rates from Shanghai were 12 kg to North America 11 kg to Europe 18 The cargo shortage may evaporate if the global economic crisis depresses demand the WTO forecast a global trade contraction of 13 32 in 2020 19 International mail between many countries stopped completely either due to suspension of domestic service or lack of transportation 20 Business aviation editBusiness aviation was less affected than airline traffic in that top executives travel is often considered essential London Biggin Hill Airport reported traffic to be around 30 of 2019 levels with transatlantic traffic strong 21 Once lockdown restrictions are eased business aviation has an opportunity to capture premium passengers who might previously have chosen airlines but who may prefer the social distancing afforded by a private jet 22 United States air charter travel strongly increased in February and March as airlines slashed schedules making commercial flights increasingly unpredictable however some charter operators such as JetSuite subsequently saw a drastic drop in business as widespread stay at home orders took effect in April 2020 23 By sector editAirlines edit For a more comprehensive list see List of airlines impacted by the COVID 19 pandemic nbsp KLM Boeing 777 200ERs parked on Schiphol runway during the crisis On 5 March 2020 the International Air Transport Association IATA estimated that the airline industry could lose between US 63 to 113 billion of revenues due to the reduced number of passengers 24 25 IATA had previously estimated revenue losses of around US 30 billion two weeks before their 5 March estimate 26 By 17 March IATA had stated that its 5 March estimate was outdated and that airlines would require 200 billion in bailouts to survive the crisis 27 IATA further revised their revenue loss estimate on 24 March to be 252 billion globally a 44 percent drop 28 Another further estimate was published on 14 April which forecasted a revenue drop of 314 billion 55 percent and a traffic drop of 48 percent in passenger count for 2020 29 Due to the sudden and large losses of revenue airlines began to hold out against refunding cancelled flights and tickets to conserve cash despite government regulations In Europe airlines had successfully negotiated to defer some 1 2 billion in air traffic control charges 30 Oliver Wyman reported that Asian airlines reduced their available seat miles by 23 percent in March 2020 31 In Europe the impact of the outbreak is expected to accelerate corporate consolidation in the airline industry 32 According to consultancy CAPA Centre for Aviation most airlines would be bankrupted by the end of May 2020 33 Air travel demand rose 2 4 percent year on year in January 2020 the lowest it has been since the April 2010 eruptions of Eyjafjallajokull though travel disruptions due to coronavirus only began in late January 34 By March the number of flights had plummeted with about 280 000 flights reported between 24 and 30 March 2020 compared to around 780 000 in a similar period the previous year 35 Despite a lack of passengers regulations regarding flight slots initially compelled British airlines to fly empty planes to European airports to avoid losing their slots 36 Fuel prices dropping due to an oil price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia by around a quarter could not compensate for the fall in demand 37 Analysts expect airlines to reduce the size of their fleets as a result of the downturn and point out that this could be done either by modernising fleets hastening the retirement of older aircraft and maintaining planned deliveries of new more fuel efficient models or by retaining older planes and reducing capital expenditure on new aircraft 38 By mid April 2020 the inactive fleet ballooned to almost 14 400 over two thirds of the 22 000 mainline passenger airliners leaving 7 635 in operation stood predominantly in Europe where less than 15 are operating than in North America 45 or Asia 49 and affecting narrow body aircraft 37 less than wide body aircraft 27 39 Consequently demand for aircraft storage increased to the point where runways and taxiways in normally busy airports such as Frankfurt Airport and Atlanta Airport were closed to make room for storage 40 In April 2020 global passenger capacity is down 91 the ICAO anticipates 1 2 billion fewer travellers by September 2020 compared to a typical year a revenue fall of 160 253 billion for the first nine months of 2020 41 While European airlines owe 10 billion for cancelled flights IATA is predicting a 55 fall in revenue compared to 2019 a 89 billion hit costing 452 billion on the wider economy 42 Boeing anticipates passenger traffic recovering in two to three years to 2019 levels but expects production to take longer 43 The Airports Council International estimates 4 6 billion fewer passengers in 2020 down from 9 1 billion in 2019 The IATA expects RPKs to be down by half from 2019 except in North America down by 36 for 314 billion lower revenues a 55 fall The association forecast air travel to lag economic recovery by up to two years air traffic in 2021 would still be down by 24 from 2019 and a return to 2019 levels would happen by 2023 2025 44 By June 2020 the IATA was projecting a collective net loss of 84 3 billion yearly for Airlines worse than the 30 billion loss during the financial crisis of 2008 2009 and projects that income will remain negative through 2021 45 By mid April 2020 14 500 mainline airliners were stored leaving 7 400 active one third of the whole fleet even one fifth for European carriers down from 20 200 in active service and 1 800 in storage before By mid June 10 500 were still stored while 11 500 were active with an average daily utilisation down by 35 from 2019 led by Asia Pacific airlines with almost 75 of the fleet flying then Europe with one third still stored then North America with a 50 50 split 46 Major airliner deliveries dropped from a typical 90 to 100 aircraft a month to an average of less than 40 in the first half of 2020 47 As traffic may not return to pre pandemic levels until 2024 older less fuel efficient and higher maintenance aircraft retirement is accelerating including the Boeing 777 Airbus A330 and Airbus A380 They are replaced with newer Airbus A350 and Boeing 787s as a surplus of used aircraft is expected until 2030 48 By the third quarter of 2020 China Southern became the first of the large Chinese carriers to return to profitability while Air China and China Eastern managed to narrow their losses helped by domestic travel recovery by September after traffic bottomed out in February but international demand is still in the doldrums 49 By May 2021 7 850 airliners were still in storage down from a peak of 16 522 in April 2020 50 As US traffic recovers networks are evolving towards more point to point transit to leisure destinations bypassing major airline hubs while business travel is still lagging 51 The aggregation of the 66 largest airlines with public financials a showed a revenue falling by 60 from 658Bn in 2019 to 262Bn in 2020 while net profits went from 17bn to a 140bn loss a 157bn decrease 52 By the end of 2021 the global airline industry had returned to 79 of its pre Covid size according to Airline Business using an index from 13 of the largest airline groups 86 of the workforce size 96 of the fleet size 71 of the revenue and 62 of the passenger numbers 53 In the final quarter of 2022 the same index was at 105 of the 2019 activity 84 of passenger numbers with higher fares due to strong demand and constrained capacity 97 of the fleet size 92 of the employee number 54 Sun et al s study notes that during the pandemic the International Air Transport Association IATA recommends a distance of 1 2 m between passengers at all times Therefore in order to maintain appropriate social distancing airlines in various countries have responded by adjusting the order and method of boarding For exmple Delta Air Lines boarding and seating rules are for middle seats to be empty and rows to be moved from back to front and United Airlines rules are from back to front Business class last Although airlines have adopted a rear to front boarding process studies have shown that this method of boarding is slow and it does not necessarily reduce social proximity 55 Aerospace manufacturers edit As demand plummeted values fell 2 to 22 between January and May 2020 for five year old aircraft and lease rates by 4 to 26 56 By August values fell further by 9 to 25 since January and lease rates by 12 to 45 57 By November market values of 20 year old large single aisles had fallen by 22 to 29 while their lease rates had fallen by 44 to 50 and market values of 20 year old widebody twins had fallen by 15 to 35 while their lease rates had fallen by 20 to 44 58 As the pandemic reduced demand for new jets in early 2020 manufacturers trimmed airliner production rates and were producing aircraft they are unable to deliver Airbus cut its monthly production from 60 to 40 A320s from 4 5 to two A330s and from nine to six A350s Boeing reduced its output per month from 14 to six 787s from five to two 777s and 737 Max production was already halted as a rate of 31 per month was targeted by early 2022 Bloomberg was expecting Airbus and Boeing to deliver 30 jets monthly each in 2021 mostly for single aisles 59 In 2020 deliveries were down by more than 50 compared to 2019 after 10 years of growth 60 Cirium forecasts a traffic recovery towards 2024 and a 3 3 growth per year over 20 years needing 43 315 airliner deliveries 60 The projection is 8 less than before the crisis while retirements are accelerated 60 Airbus reduced its wing production on factories in Broughton Filton and Bremen and reduced working hours in the sites Its French and Spanish sites suspended production for several days before a partial resumption on 23 March 61 Monthly production was cut to four A220s forty A320s two A330s and six A350s 62 Airbus delivered 122 aircraft in the first quarter 40 fewer than in the previous year and 60 could not be handed over due to travel restrictions Airliner revenues were down 22 to 7 5 billion earnings dropped by 82 to 57 million and their adjusted EBIT was down 59 to 191 million The company free cash flow was a negative 8 billion including the 3 6 billion bribery penalties similar to the negative 4 3 billion of the previous year without For the first quarter Airbus total adjusted EBIT was halved to 281 million and it made a net loss of 481 million compared to a 40 million profit in the previous year In 2020 capital expenditure should be reduced by 700 million to 1 9 billion 63 Boeing froze hiring and reportedly laid off employees due to a large number of cancellations which outpaced new orders in February 2020 64 On 11 March it was revealed that Boeing was to exercise its whole US 13 8 billion loan facility which it secured in February Prior to the pandemic Boeing s business had been impacted by groundings of its 737 MAX aircraft 65 By 7 April Boeing had indefinitely suspended production at Boeing South Carolina and Puget Sound Washington completely halting the assembly of its commercial aircraft 66 On 21 April Boeing announced a management structure overhaul 67 On 27 May it announced plans to lay off 12 000 employees while it reported zero new orders in April 2020 68 In October it announced plans to lay off thousands more employees through the following year with the expectation that it would end 2021 with 19 fewer employees than its pre pandemic workforce 69 Bombardier on 26 March 2020 announced a suspension of most Canadian production in Ontario for 2 weeks and Quebec until 13 April in addition to halting production in Northern Ireland 12 400 Bombardier employees in Canada 70 percent of the workforce were furloughed 70 CFM International deliveries of CFM LEAP engines across the first nine months of 2020 fell to 622 from 1 316 in the same period in 2019 and 123 CFM56s against 327 while Leap fleet cycles were down 15 year on year and CFM56 cycles were 48 lower 71 Embraer reported deferment of orders of its commercial aircraft 72 It also suspended its financial guidance for 2020 73 General Electric announced on 23 March 2020 that it would cut one tenth of employees in its jet engine arm amounting to around 2 500 employees in addition to furloughing around half of its maintenance and repair staff 74 Mitsubishi in May 2020 halved the budget of its SpaceJet programme and repatriated all work from the US to Japan 75 In October 2020 it announced a further budget reduction and put almost all SpaceJet activities on hold 76 Rolls Royce planned to cut 9 000 jobs mainly in its civil aerospace division and mainly affecting its UK site at Derby 77 Textron Inc the parent company of Textron Aviation and Bell Helicopter announced a 1 950 jobs layoff 78 United Aircraft Corporation Russian Industry and Trade Minister said is quite balanced as a production unit Because recovery is quicker in Russia than abroad the production program is drafted for 2020 2021 Also the market will require up to 1 500 new civil jets within the next 15 to 20 years adding that there is scope for optimism in the domestic industry 79 On 25 April 2020 Boeing announced it had terminated the planned Boeing Embraer joint venture after the 24 April delay expired attributing it to Embraer s failure to meet conditions 80 Later the same day Embraer asserted that it had satisfied the conditions for consolidation to proceed and that it would seek compensation for Boeing s allegedly wrongful termination of the deal 81 Aviation analyst Scott Hamilton believed the collapse in demand for airliners caused by the pandemic and the resulting cash constraints motivated Boeing s defection along with the desire to avoid the perception that it was using government pandemic relief funds for foreign investment 82 Airports edit nbsp Parked planes in May 2020 at Victorville California Teruel Spain Lourdes France Alice Springs Australia nbsp Queues to the security control at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol in June 2022 From March 2020 various United States airlines stored hundreds of disused aircraft at Southern California Logistics Airport 83 84 and Roswell International Air Center 85 Runways and taxiways at Frankfurt Airport Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport and Tulsa International Airport were closed and used as aircraft storage areas by Lufthansa Delta Air Lines and American Airlines respectively 86 Ciudad Real International Airport and Madrid Airport benefited from medical equipment cargo corridors from China 87 88 89 importance By mid April 2020 Airports Council International ACI observed a 95 fall in traffic in 18 airports in major aviation markets in Asia Pacific and the Middle East 90 On 27 April 2020 Westchester County Airport closed to airlines for about a month for a major runway repaving project which was originally scheduled to be undertaken in stages late at night over the span of four months The decision to close and expedite the project was made because the number of daily flights had fallen drastically This was the first total closure of a United States commercial airport for pandemic related reasons 91 Various airlines from outside Australia stored aircraft at Alice Springs Airport 92 On 5 May 2020 ACI World estimated that in 2020 passenger traffic worldwide would amount to less than half of what was previously projected for the year 93 UK airports axed expansion plans valued at 1 billion 94 In May 2020 Dallas Fort Worth International Airport DFW was the world s busiest airport measured by aircraft movements despite significantly lower traffic than normal American Airlines diminished point to point routes and instead sent flights through its DFW hub creating traffic volumes surpassing those at the normally busier O Hare International Airport and Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport by substantial margins 95 In May 2020 Salt Lake City International Airport reported that an in progress redevelopment project would be sped up by as much as two years by the pandemic Lower passenger numbers meant that larger areas of the airport could be closed much earlier than expected for demolition and renovation saving up to 300 million for the project overall 96 Orly Airport in Paris was closed to commercial traffic from 1 April to 25 June 2020 citation needed In Europe some of the airports that saw the most parked airliners during the pandemic were Ciudad Real International Airport Madrid Airport Teruel Airport and Istanbul Airport 97 In late October 2020 ACI Europe stated that 193 mostly regional of the 740 airports in Europe were risking bankruptcy 98 Coronavirus related travel restrictions imposed in 2020 reduced traffic by 70 at the Dubai International Airport The number of travellers through this tourism hub dropped to 25 9 million in 2020 99 As compared to Q1 of 2020 Dubai International Airport s passenger traffic has plunged 67 8 to reach 5 75 million in Q1 of 2021 Along with the main airports in Tokyo Los Angeles London Chicago and Paris Dubai has also dropped out of the top 10 rankings for total passengers last year 100 On 17 July 2021 ACI World estimated that global passenger traffic in 2020 was reduced by over 5 9 billion passengers a loss of 62 3 of what was estimated for the year 101 In 2021 the loss is estimated at just over 5 billion passengers representing 50 9 of the total estimated for the year 101 In Summer 2022 many airports experienced extraordinary long delays and a large number of cancelled flights as a consequence of the pandemic In particular at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol the pandemic led to recession of air traffic and subsequently to the shortage of security staff and walkout of baggage handlers which resulted in hours long queues 102 Regulators edit In March 2020 the United States Federal Aviation Administration FAA announced that it would not take enforcement action against pilots whose medical certificates expired between 31 March and 30 June due to the difficulty of scheduling appointments with certified Aviation Medical Examiners In June the FAA expected that the exception would be extended 103 The FAA announced on 23 April 2020 a reduction in the operating hours of over 100 control towers and terminal radar approach control facilities citing a drop in air traffic of as much as 96 Pilots were advised that certain air traffic control services and instrument landing system approaches may be periodically unavailable 104 Government edit See also Aviation taxation and subsidies On 8 June 2020 the Austrian conservative green coalition government concluded a support deal for Austrian Airlines a subsidiary of Lufthansa for 150 million in taxpayer grants and 300 million in banking loans that are to be paid back This was significantly less than expected Austrian Airlines had applied for 767 million and came under the stringent conditions some of which also applied to other airline companies operating in Austria to restrict short distance airline operations to ban cheap tickets below 40 and include a 12 environmental tax to each ticket and to half its CO2 emissions by 2030 105 106 Other organizations edit Many United States general aviation social events and fly ins scheduled for the spring of 2020 were cancelled or postponed including Sun n Fun 107 and several conducted by the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association 108 On 1 May 2020 citing uncertainty about COVID 19 social restrictions imposed by the state of Wisconsin the Experimental Aircraft Association canceled EAA AirVenture Oshkosh for 2020 109 Air charter company JetSuite ceased flight operations on 15 April 2020 and its parent company filed for bankruptcy on 28 April 2020 CEO Alex Wilcox attributed the company s collapse to a 90 drop in business due to widespread stay at home orders 110 Travel technology company Sabre Corporation furloughed one third of its workforce on 23 April 2020 citing an 81 drop in revenue due to drastically reduced airline and other travel bookings Sabre had previously cut salaries by 20 suspended 401 k pension contributions cut various other expenses and obtained a US 1 1 billion loan but these steps reportedly failed to offset losses 23 By country edit nbsp Change in jet fuel consumption by country relative to 2019 nbsp Beijing Capital International Airport empty nbsp A nearly empty flight from Beijing to Los Angeles This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items March 2020 Argentina The government suspended domestic flights in March 2020 during the beginning of the pandemic in the country and imposed restriction of international flights for several months In June 2021 the government imposed a daily limit of 600 entries per day to prevent the entry of the SARS CoV 2 Delta variant 111 On 3 July 2021 domestic flights resumed between some cities in the country 112 Canada Canadians were advised to avoid non essential travel on 13 March 2020 while Canadian border was closed except for Canadian citizens and permanent residents on 16 March Canada United States border closed later on 18 March 113 Essential travel is exempted and international travellers must enter through Calgary International Airport Vancouver International Airport Toronto Pearson International Airport or Montreal Trudeau International Airport with mandatory 14 days quarantine 114 The border closure has been extended multiple times and remained closed until at least 21 August 115 Most transborder flights have been cancelled since late March due to the lack in demand 116 The prolonged international travel ban resulted in Air Canada s loss of C 1 75 billion in August and they have since urged for easing in travel restrictions 117 China Roughly two thirds of international flights to and from China were cancelled in February 2020 Flights between Japan and China saw a 60 percent reduction in traffic while the US and China saw a reduction of 86 percent 118 Two thirds of domestic flights within China were similarly cancelled numbering around 10 000 flights daily while the ticket prices for remaining flights dropped South China Morning Post reported that a seat for a three hour flight between Shanghai and Chongqing cost as little as 29 Yuan US 4 1 Passenger traffic between 25 January and 14 February dropped by 75 percent compared to the same period in 2019 119 Since 23 March 2020 all international passenger flights bound for Beijing are diverted to twelve designated first points of entry under the Civil Aviation Administration of China CAAC s guideline 120 Since 29 March all international flights to and from China are reduced with flight limit 121 Since 4 June 2020 CAAC decided to allow more foreign airlines to operate passenger flights to China from 8 June while circuit breaker measures would also be implemented 122 Colombia Colombia ceased all commercial air travel at the beginning of the pandemic Domestic flights resumed gradually beginning on 20 July 2020 Colombia s Independence Day with a single flight of less than 200 km 123 El Dorado International Airport in Bogota reopened on 1 September with 38 flights 124 Denmark Passenger figures went down by around 99 in April 2020 compared to April 2019 This affected both domestic and international flights Denmark closed its border to all tourism and other non priority travel Two noticeable cases were Aarhus Airport which had no passengers in April and Bornholm Airport which had 16 as many passengers in April 2020 compared to 2019 On most domestic air routes car travel is possible with 3 to 4 hours drive time but Bornholm is an island where ferry and air is the only possibilities See also List of the busiest airports in the Nordic countries 2020 coronavirus statistics Fiji In April 2020 Fiji Airways suspended all international flights and the main international airport in Nadi was closed 125 As a result the national airline terminated more than 700 employees 126 127 On 26 May the government issued guarantees in support of FJ 450 million US 208 million worth of initiatives aimed at strengthening Fiji Airway s cash reserves 128 India Indian airlines are estimated to report a loss of US 600 million not including state owned Air India for the January March quarter The government of India is planning a rescue package for the aviation industry for as much as 120 billion US 1 6 billion 129 Indonesia On 2 April 2020 Indonesia banned foreigners from entering their borders Starting on 24 April all passenger flights except those carrying medical personnel supplies or repatriating Indonesian citizens from abroad foreigners from Indonesia were banned 130 After implementing health guidelines the ban on passenger flights was lifted on 7 May starting with the resumptions of domestic passenger flights 131 Italy Due to the outbreak and the ensuing national lockdown thousands of flights to and from Italy were cancelled 132 Mauritius As from March 2020 all international flights to Mauritius was suspended The national carrier Air Mauritius entered voluntary administration after making losses for quite years 133 Nepal From March 2020 to prevent the importation and spread of coronavirus infection all aircraft including domestic and international with the exception of humanitarian flights were banned arriving in Nepal 134 Pakistan The Government of Pakistan had allowed domestic flights to resume following suspension during the COVID 19 pandemic on 16 May 135 Six days later Pakistan International Airlines Flight 8303 crashed in Karachi from Lahore 136 Philippines The National Economic and Development Authority projects a loss of at least 1 2 million tourist arrivals assuming that the pandemic persists by June 2020 137 South Africa South African Airways had been placed in bankruptcy protection in December 2019 However with the pandemic leading to the complete grounding of all flights and the government refusing to make more finance available the airline is heading for a winding down process or liquidation depending on the outcome of negotiations with unions and workers on retrenchments 138 Turkmenistan From March 2020 to prevent the importation and spread of coronavirus infection all aircraft arriving in Turkmenistan from abroad are redirected to the Turkmenabat International Airport 139 Passengers arriving from outside of Turkmenistan are carried screened for signs of active infection in particular body temperature is measured Visitors who are flagged during screening are transported to an allocated hospital The airport medical center is equipped with personal protective equipment After passing a medical examination the plane together with passengers on board leaves for Ashgabat Departures from Turkmenistan are carried out from Ashgabat International Airport Persons authorized solely for diplomatic official humanitarian purposes are allowed to enter the territory of Turkmenistan 140 United Kingdom On 22 February 2021 UK s PM Boris Johnson announced that leisure travel overseas will not start until 17 May 141 United States Multiple airlines waived fees for flight booking changes and cancellations during the coronavirus outbreak following a request from Sen Richard Blumenthal 142 Between 20 January and 7 March 2020 stock prices in US airlines decreased by 30 percent 143 Flight fares for domestic flights also dropped 144 On 25 March the United States Senate passed a bill that would allocate 58 billion in loans and guarantees to aviation related companies including 25 billion for passenger carriers and 4 billion for cargo carriers plus 17 billion for companies critical to maintaining national security such as Boeing The airlines accepting the package would be barred from increasing executive pay issuing dividends or buying back shares during the aid period 145 On 3 September 2020 the CEO of the lobbying group Airlines for America said We don t see it demand fully rebounding until 2024 Right now we re fighting for survival 146 Vietnam Despite Vietnam s success in containing the epidemic Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam CAAV said the aviation industry is in the worst situation in 60 years of development Of the 234 Vietnam registered aircraft more than 200 were grounded while airlines still have to spend hundreds millions dollars to maintain operations such as aircraft leasing cost paying for employee aircraft maintenance and apron parking fee 147 Vietnam Airlines estimates its 2020 revenues could decline by US 2 1 billion This has seen as many as 10 000 employees of the national flag carrier over 50 of its staff strength taking unpaid leave Duong Tri Thanh CEO of Vietnam Airlines stressing that the carrier was going through the hardest time in its history 148 Environmental impacts editMain article Impact of the COVID 19 pandemic on the environment The sharp and lasting decline in planned air travel throughout the pandemic had a beneficial effect of global climate change 149 The effects of COVID 19 lockdowns were subject of the first quantitative research on large scale modal shifts and demand reduction in aviation 150 It illustrated that a significant share of business travel is not necessary 151 and advanced or increased the adoption of various methods and technologies to mitigate air travel demand 152 153 154 155 156 157 Travel and virus spread editThe use of aeroplanes by travelers has been implicated in the spread of the coronavirus 158 The World Health Organization noted that Transmission of infection may occur between passengers who are seated in the same area of an aircraft usually as a result of the infected individual coughing or sneezing or by touch 159 Amidst the coronavirus pandemic many airline tickets have been sold at discount 160 and some buyers attended spring break celebrations despite warnings to remain at home 160 A multitude of young adults have tested positive for the coronavirus upon returning from spring break celebrations among those from Texas vacationing in Cabo San Lucas were forty four positive persons 161 Although a HEPA filter captures 99 97 percent of airborne particles it does not account for air that does not go through the filter and many airlines have required passengers to wear masks during the flight 162 According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention pathogens do not spread easily on flights but prolonged proximity still presents a danger of infection 163 nbsp Aircraft cabin disinfectionHazard controls editFurther information Workplace hazard controls for COVID 19 According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention if a person becomes sick on an airplane proper hazard controls include separating the sick person from others designating one crew member to serve the sick person and offering a face mask or asking the sick person to cover their mouth and nose with tissues when coughing or sneezing Cabin crew should wear disposable medical gloves and possibly additional personal protective equipment Disposable items should be disposed of in a biohazard bag and contaminated surfaces should be cleaned and disinfected afterwards 164 Proof of vaccination editFurther information Vaccine passports during the COVID 19 pandemic and COVID 19 vaccine card See also Vaccination requirements for international travel and Vaccination policy nbsp Scott Morrison People have the choice of two weeks of quarantine or being vaccinated 165 For passengers edit On 23 November 2020 Qantas announced that the company will ask for proof of COVID 19 vaccination from international travelers According to Alan Joyce the firm s CEO a coronavirus vaccine would become a necessity when travelling We are looking at changing our terms and conditions to say for international travellers we will ask people to have a vaccination before they can get on the aircraft 166 Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison subsequently announced that all international travellers who fly to Australia without proof of a COVID 19 vaccination will be required to quarantine at their own expense 165 Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews and the CEOs of Melbourne Airport Brisbane Airport and Flight Centre all supported the Morrison government s no jab no fly policy with only Sydney Airport s CEO suggesting advanced testing might also be sufficient to eliminate quarantine in the future 167 The International Air Transport Association IATA announced that it was almost finished with developing a digital health pass which states air passengers COVID 19 testing and vaccination information to airlines and governments 168 Korean Air and Air New Zealand were seriously considering mandatory vaccination as well but would negotiate it with their respective governments 169 KLM CEO Pieter Elbers responded on 24 November that KLM does not yet have any plans for mandatory vaccination on its flights 170 Brussels Airlines and Lufthansa said they had no plans yet on requiring passengers to present proof of vaccination before boarding but Brussels Airport CEO Arnaud Feist agreed with Qantas policy stating Sooner or later having proof of vaccination or a negative test will become compulsory 171 Ryanair announced it would not require proof of vaccination for air travel within the EU EasyJet stated it would not require any proof at all The Irish Times commented that a vaccination certificate for flying was quite common in countries around the world for other diseases such as for yellow fever in many African countries 172 nbsp CommonsPass logo On 25 November separately from IATA s digital health pass initiative five major airlines United Airlines Lufthansa Virgin Atlantic Swiss International Air Lines and JetBlue announced the 1 December 2020 introduction of the CommonPass which shows the results of passengers COVID 19 tests It was designed as an international standard by the World Economic Forum and The Commons Project and set up in such a way that it could also be used to record vaccination results in the future It standardises test results and aims to prevent forgery of vaccination records while storing only limited data on a passenger s phone to safeguard their privacy The CommonPass had already successfully undergone a trial period in October with United Airlines and Cathay Pacific Airways 173 174 On 26 November the Danish Ministry of Health confirmed that it was working on a COVID 19 vaccine passport which would likely not only work as proof of vaccination for air travel but for other activities such as concerts private parties and access to various businesses a perspective welcomed by the Confederation of Danish Industry The Danish College of General Practitioners also welcomed the project saying that it doesn t force anyone to vaccinate but encourages them to do so if they want to enjoy certain privileges in society 175 Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney said on 27 November 2020 that although he currently has no plans for a passport vaccination stamp his government was working on changing the passenger locator form to include proof of PCR negative tests for the coronavirus and that it was likely to be further adjusted to include vaccination data when a COVID 19 vaccine would become available Coveney stressed that We do not want following enormous efforts and sacrifices from people to reintroduce the virus again through international travel which is a danger if it is not managed right 176 For employees edit An August 2021 statement from Delta s CEO revealed that the average hospital stay for COVID 19 has cost Delta 50 000 per person and that all of these hospitalized employees were unvaccinated While Delta did not mandate vaccination it said that unvaccinated employees enrolled in the company s healthcare plan would be charged 200 per month and would also have to be tested weekly for the virus 177 See also edit nbsp Aviation portal nbsp COVID 19 portal nbsp Medicine portal nbsp Viruses portal 2020 in aviation Epidemiology Study of health and disease within a population List of airline bankruptcies in the United States Impact of the COVID 19 pandemic on tourism Impact of the COVID 19 pandemic on airlines Vaccination requirements for international travelNotes edit not included Air India Globalia Air Europa s parent Hainan Airlines LOT Polish Airlines South African Airways and Virgin AustraliaReferences edit Jolly Jasper 29 April 2020 Airlines may not recover from Covid 19 crisis for five years says Airbus The Guardian We are now in the midst of the gravest crisis the aerospace industry has ever known Airlines increase job cuts as coronavirus pandemic crushes air travel Boston Herald 28 May 2020 Retrieved 29 May 2020 This is still the worst crisis that this industry has ever been faced with Assis Claudia 30 April 2020 United Airlines says coronavirus pandemic is worst crisis in the history of aviation MarketWatch the most disruptive crisis in the history of aviation Virus worst crisis to hit aviation Joyce ABC s 7 30 program 19 March 2020 via The Canberra Times This is the worst crisis the aviation industry has gone through Hollinger Peggy 20 April 2020 How coronavirus brought aerospace down to earth Financial Times cancel orders to survive the worst crisis in aviation history Flight Attendants and Pilots Ask Is It OK to Keep Working The New York Times 12 April 2020 the current crisis which is seen by many as the worst in the history of aviation British Airways furloughs 36 000 staff in worst ever crisis The Independent 2 April 2020 Airlines Want To Cancel Rule Requiring Them To Refund Fares For Canceled Flights NPR 7 April 2020 Eddy Melissa 7 January 2022 Airlines push the E U to ease airport rules as Omicron rages The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 26 January 2022 a b Inc Aislelabs 4 May 2020 How Airports Globally are Responding to Coronavirus by Aislelabs retrieved 8 May 2020 Gudmundsson S V Cattaneo M Redondi R Forecasting recovery time in air transport markets in the presence of 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Retrieved 11 March 2020 Hemmerdinger Jon 13 April 2020 Out with the old jets How virus led fleet decisions will impact OEMs aftermarket providers FlightGlobal Kingsley Jones Max 15 April 2020 Mixed fortunes globally as active fleet drops towards 7 000 aircraft FlightGlobal Delta American and other airlines are parking planes on closed runways at major airports as carriers struggle to store grounded airliners Business Insider Business Insider Singapore Business Insider 26 March 2020 Retrieved 24 April 2020 ICAO predicts 1 2 billion fewer air travellers by September FlightGlobal 23 April 2020 Shutdown to cost European airlines 89 billion IATA FlightGlobal 24 April 2020 Hamilton Scott 27 April 2020 Boeing sees air traffic recovering in 2 3 years production will take longer Leeham News Graham Dunn 4 June 2020 The story of the coronavirus impact on airlines in numbers FlightGlobal Graham Dunn 9 June 2020 Airlines to post record net loss of 84bn this year IATA FlightGlobal Max Kingsley Jones 17 June 2020 Active mainline fleet over takes idle tally as recovery picks up FlightGlobal Max Kingsley Jones 22 June 2020 By the numbers coronavirus effect on the global fleet FlightGlobal Pandemic speeds retirement of older high maintenance aircraft FlightGlobal 28 October 2020 Alfred Chua 31 October 2020 China Southern first among Big Three to return to profitability since pandemic began FlightGlobal Judson Rollins 13 May 2021 2021 fleet trends small jets get bigger bigger jets get smaller and the old makes way for the new Leeham News Jon Hemmerdinger 2 June 2021 The big shift How the pandemic forced US airlines to revamp networks FlightGlobal A near 100bn Equity Hole to Fill Leeham News 7 December 2021 Lewis Harper 8 March 2022 Airline Business Index shows industry exceeding three quarters of pre Covid size FlightGlobal Lewis Harper 14 March 2023 Airline Business Index shows global revenue surging above pre Covid levels FlightGlobal Sun Xiaoqian Wandelt Sebastian Zheng Changhong Zhang Anming July 2021 COVID 19 pandemic and air transportation Successfully navigating the paper hurricane Journal of Air Transport Management 94 102062 doi 10 1016 j jairtraman 2021 102062 ISSN 0969 6997 PMC 8045456 PMID 33875908 Scott Hamilton 25 May 2020 Pontifications Aircraft values lease rates plummet Leeham News Scott Hamilton 19 August 2020 Lease rates aircraft values continue to plunge Leeham News Scott Hamilton 9 November 2020 Pontifications Aircraft prices rents plunge Leeham News Jon Hemmerdinger 27 October 2020 More aircraft production rate cuts coming Perhaps analysts say FlightGlobal a b c Chris Seymour 23 December 2020 Looking past the pandemic to gauge future fleets FlightGlobal Kaminski Morrow David 26 March 2020 Airbus temporarily cuts wing production at UK and German sites FlightGlobal David Kaminski Morrow 29 April 2020 Airbus not expecting to review production levels before mid year FlightGlobal David Kaminski Morrow 29 April 2020 Airbus concentrates on cash preservation as crisis starts to bite FlightGlobal Josephs Leslie 11 March 2020 Boeing halts hiring limits overtime as coronavirus poses global economic disruption shares down 13 CNBC Retrieved 11 March 2020 Boeing to draw down billions in loan cash as pressure builds Reuters 11 March 2020 Retrieved 11 March 2020 Bogaisky Jeremy 6 April 2020 Boeing Moves To Completely Shut Down Airliner Production Forbes Retrieved 7 April 2020 Hemmerdinger Jon 22 April 2020 Boeing to restructure simplify corporate functions amid changing industry FlightGlobal Bushey Claire 27 May 2020 Boeing to axe 12 000 US workers even as Max assembly resumes Financial Times Retrieved 27 May 2020 Chokshi Niraj 28 October 2020 Boeing will cut thousands of jobs as its revenue plunges The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 28 October 2020 Bombardier halts most operations in Canada due to coronavirus Reuters 24 March 2020 Retrieved 26 March 2020 Dominic Perry 30 October 2020 Leap deliveries more than halved so far this year FlightGlobal Wolfsteller Pilar 26 March 2020 Embraer sees commercial orders deferred not cancelled FlightGlobal Retrieved 26 March 2020 Planemaker Embraer posts Q4 loss suspends 2020 guidance due to coronavirus Reuters 26 March 2020 Retrieved 26 March 2020 GE to Cut 10 of Aviation Workforce as Coronavirus Grounds Airliners The Wall Street Journal 23 March 2020 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Hemmerdinger Jon 23 May 2020 Mitsubishi Aircraft to close all non Japan locations shelve M100 development FlightGlobal Chua Alfred 30 October 2020 Mitsubishi imposes temporary pause on SpaceJet certification work continues FlightGlobal Coronavirus Rolls Royce to cut 9 000 jobs amid virus crisis BBC News 20 May 2020 Retrieved 22 May 2020 Pilar Wolfsteller 19 June 2020 Textron Aviation parent to eliminate 1 950 jobs FlightGlobal Systemic crisis not expected in aviation industry due to pandemic says minister RUSSIAN NEWS AGENCY RU SEARCH 31 July 2020 Retrieved 1 August 2020 Boeing Terminates Agreement to Establish Joint Ventures with Embraer Press release Boeing 25 April 2020 Embraer says that Boeing wrongfully terminated the Master Transaction Agreement Press release Embraer 25 April 2020 Gates Dominic 25 April 2020 Boeing kills its 4 2 billion purchase of Embraer as coronavirus roils the aviation industry The Seattle Times Seattle Washington Estacio Martin 24 March 2020 Coronavirus As air travel drops demand for plane storage jumps at Southern California Logistics Airport Daily Press Victorville California Archived from the original on 29 September 2020 Retrieved 19 August 2020 Arnold Kyle 30 March 2020 Southwest Airlines CEO We re parking more planes and cutting spending as COVID 19 challenge grows The Dallas Morning News Dallas Texas King Corey 8 May 2020 Roswell airport becomes parking hub for grounded planes due to pandemic Albuquerque New Mexico KRQE Pallini Thomas 26 March 2020 Delta American and other airlines are parking planes on closed runways at major airports as carriers struggle to store grounded airliners Business Insider Grupo Oesia gestiona la logistica de los vuelos de Iberia a China Info Defensa in Spanish 30 March 2020 Archived from the original on 21 January 2021 Retrieved 11 March 2021 Ciudad Real International Airport CRIA la aerolinea portuguesa HI FLY y un amplio grupo de empresarios espanoles crean un Corredor Aereo Sanitario entre China y Espana con vuelos directos sin escalas El Semanal de La Mancha in Spanish 15 April 2020 Aterriza en el aeropuerto de Ciudad Real el primer avion con dos millones de mascarillas desde China Diario Lanza in Spanish 18 May 2020 Traffic at Asia Pacific airports hits rock bottom ACI FlightGlobal 22 April 2020 Negroni Christine 23 April 2020 Few Travelers Few Flights and Now a Total Airport Shutdown The New York Times New York City Ironside Robyn 4 May 2020 Alice transformed into aircraft haven The Australian Economic impact assessment of COVID 19 on the airport business ACI PDF ACI World 5 May 2020 Archived from the original PDF on 16 March 2021 Retrieved 6 May 2020 Price David 21 May 2020 UK airports to axe 1bn of projects construction s latest setback Construction News Arnold Kyle 4 June 2020 DFW becomes the world s busiest airport during COVID 19 downturn The Dallas Morning News Dallas Texas McKellar Katie 25 May 2020 Pandemic could shorten Salt Lake airport rebuild by 2 years save 300M Deseret News Archived from the original on 2 June 2020 Retrieved 5 August 2020 Yebenes Julia 1 October 2020 El aeropuerto de Ciudad Real es el tercero de Espana y el octavo de Europa en almacenamiento de aeronaves segun Eurocontrol Lanza Digital Mari Eccles 27 October 2020 193 European airports at risk of closure due to crisis says industry lobby Politico Europe Dubai Airports Traffic Slumps 70 in 2020 on Covid 19 Lockdowns Bloomberg 15 February 2021 Dubai International Airport s Q1 passenger traffic slips but cargo volumes rise The National News 28 April 2021 a b The impact of COVID 19 on the airport business and the path to recovery ACI World 14 July 2021 Schiphol airport braces itself for summer of long queues and chaos DutchNews nl 1 June 2022 Wolfsteller Pilar 18 June 2020 FAA plans to extend medical certificate exception for pilots FlightGlobal FAA to scale back ATC service as traffic declines aopa org Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association 23 April 2020 Retrieved 24 April 2020 Gerhard Hegmann 9 June 2020 Osterreich verbietet die 9 99 Euro Billigstfluge Die Welt in German Retrieved 13 June 2020 Alexandra Schwarz Goerlich 8 June 2020 Lufthansa s Austrian arm gets 450 million euro government bailout Reuters Retrieved 13 June 2020 Cobb Alyssa J 2 April 2020 Sun n Fun canceled show organizers to offer a Sun n Fun at Home series aopa org Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association Retrieved 24 April 2020 Coronavirus Affects Aviation Events AOPA Pilot Frederick Maryland Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association May 2020 p 41 Cobb Alyssa J 1 May 2020 EAA AirVenture canceled aopa org Frederick Maryland Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association Retrieved 20 May 2020 O Donnell Paul 28 April 2020 Dallas private aviation service JetSuite s parent company files for bankruptcy The Dallas Morning News Dallas Texas Retrieved 28 April 2020 Ya rige el nuevo limite de ingreso a pasajeros internacionales The new entry limit for international passengers is already in force Pagina 12 in Spanish 28 June 2021 Retrieved 3 July 2021 Flybondi reanuda servicios tras las restricciones causadas por la pandemia en Argentina Flybondi resumes services after restrictions caused by the pandemic in Argentina in Spanish Merco Press 3 July 2021 Retrieved 3 July 2021 Staples David The road to Canada s COVID 19 outbreak Pt 3 timeline of federal government failure at border to slow the virus Edmonton Journal Retrieved 5 August 2020 Government of Canada 29 October 2020 Coronavirus disease COVID 19 Canada s response Aiello Rachel 16 July 2020 PM Trudeau confirms Canada U S border closure extending to Aug 21 CTV News Ottawa News Bureau Online Producer Retrieved 5 August 2020 Karp Aaron Canadian airlines react to border closure with significant cuts RoutesOnline Retrieved 5 August 2020 MacGregor Sandra 2 August 2020 Air Canada Posts Loses Of 1 75 Billion Urges Easing Of Travel Restrictions Forbes Retrieved 5 August 2020 Zhou Youyou 11 February 2020 Two thirds of China s international flights cancelled amid coronavirus outbreak Quartz Retrieved 10 March 2020 Flight for less than a cup of coffee China s airlines try to lure customers South China Morning Post 26 February 2020 Retrieved 10 March 2020 CAAC Publishes Designated First Points of Entry into China for International Flights Bound for Beijing Civil Aviation Administration of China 22 March 2020 Retrieved 10 March 2020 Notice on Further Reducing International Passenger Flights during the Epidemic Prevention and Control Period Civil Aviation Administration of China 26 March 2020 Retrieved 10 March 2020 民航局关于调整国际客运航班的通知 in Chinese 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Indonesia Suspends All Commercial Flights Tempo in Indonesian 23 April 2020 Retrieved 24 April 2020 Indonesian airlines resume domestic passenger flights with strict health protocols The Jakarta Post Retrieved 13 July 2020 Coronavirus Airlines cancel thousands of flights BBC 10 March 2020 Retrieved 10 March 2020 Air Mauritius Goes Into administration Business Traveller 23 April 2020 Retrieved 28 April 2020 Prasain S Shrestha P M 18 March 2020 Government bans entry of all passengers including Nepalis from midnight March 20 The Kathmandu Post Kathmandu Retrieved 19 September 2020 Pakistan resumes domestic flights partially as nation wide lockdown eased The Economic Times 16 May 2020 Retrieved 23 May 2020 Calder Simon Hamdani Raza 22 May 2020 Pakistan plane crash Khan calls for an investigation after Airbus jet come down near Karachi killing dozens The Independent Retrieved 23 May 2020 NEDA Tourist arrivals in the Philippines to drop by 1 42M amid COVID 19 situation GMA News 9 March 2020 Retrieved 26 March 2020 The 2 options left for SAA wind down or liquidate Retrieved 23 April 2020 Aviarejsy iz za predelov Turkmenistana vremenno perenapravlyayutsya v Turkmenabat Obshestvo Turkmenistan internet portal o kulturnoj delovoj i razvlekatelnoj zhizni v Turkmenistane Retrieved 25 March 2020 Informaciya dlya grazhdan Respubliki Belarus rekomendacii Posolstva v svyazi s koronavirusom Posolstvo Respubliki Belarus v Turkmenistane Information for citizens of the Republic of Belarus recommendations of the Embassy in connection with the coronavirus Embassy of the Republic of Belarus in Turkmenistan turkmenistan mfa gov by in Russian Retrieved 25 March 2020 International travel banned until 17 May at earliest The Independent 19 October 2009 Retrieved 22 February 2021 Nguyen Terry 5 March 2020 How the coronavirus outbreak is affecting US airlines Vox Retrieved 10 March 2020 Assis Claudia 7 March 2020 Airline stocks slammed by coronavirus fears but experts say reaction may be overdone MarketWatch Retrieved 10 March 2020 Nguyen Terry 10 March 2020 Plane ticket prices are dropping because of the coronavirus Vox Retrieved 10 March 2020 Slotnick David 25 March 2020 Airlines would get the 60 billion bailout they asked for in the new Senate coronavirus stimulus bill which would prohibit layoffs and ban stock buybacks and dividends Business Insider Retrieved 26 March 2020 Blum Jeremy 3 September 2020 U S Airline Industry Says It Won t Bounce Back From COVID 19 Until 2024 HuffPost Retrieved 4 September 2020 Hang khong khong phải la thiệt hại bao nhieu ma la cứu van được bao nhieu in Vietnamese Vietnamnet 10 000 Vietnam Airlines staff take unpaid leave over Covid 19 crisis VnExpress Adhikari Arpita Sengupta Joydip Hussain Chaudhery Mustansar 1 October 2021 Declining carbon emission concentration during COVID 19 A critical review on temporary relief Carbon Trends 5 100131 Bibcode 2021CarbT 500131A doi 10 1016 j cartre 2021 100131 ISSN 2667 0569 PMC 8590614 PMID 38620883 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mobility practices and well being lessons from the COVID 19 pandemic in Norway Sustainability Science Practice and Policy 18 1 278 291 Bibcode 2022SSPP 18 278G doi 10 1080 15487733 2022 2043682 S2CID 247513733 Tao Yanqiu Steckel Debbie Klemes Jiri Jaromir You Fengqi 16 December 2021 Trend towards virtual and hybrid conferences may be an effective climate change mitigation strategy Nature Communications 12 1 7324 Bibcode 2021NatCo 12 7324T doi 10 1038 s41467 021 27251 2 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 8677730 PMID 34916499 Stoll Christian Mehling Michael Arthur 23 October 2020 COVID 19 Clinching the Climate Opportunity One Earth 3 4 400 404 Bibcode 2020OEart 3 400S doi 10 1016 j oneear 2020 09 003 ISSN 2590 3330 PMC 7508545 PMID 34173539 Fragkos Panagiotis January 2022 Decarbonizing the International Shipping and Aviation Sectors Energies 15 24 9650 doi 10 3390 en15249650 ISSN 1996 1073 McKeever Amy 6 March 2020 Here s how coronavirus spreads on a plane and the safest place to sit National Geographic Archived from the original on 29 January 2020 Retrieved 20 April 2020 Passy Jacob 14 March 2020 Should I cancel my flight Does recirculated air on a plane spread coronavirus Here s what you need to know before traveling MarketWatch Retrieved 20 April 2020 a b Hoffower Hillary 23 March 2020 It s Gen Z you want Millennials are defending themselves from accusations that they re out partying and ignoring warnings amid the coronavirus pandemic Business Insider Retrieved 20 April 2020 Hoffower Hillary 2 April 2020 44 Texas spring breakers who partied in Cabo have tested positive for the coronavirus Business Insider Retrieved 20 April 2020 How clean is the air on planes Travel 28 August 2020 Archived from the original on 28 August 2020 Retrieved 15 October 2020 CDC 11 February 2020 Coronavirus Disease 2019 COVID 19 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Retrieved 4 November 2020 Updated Interim Guidance for Airlines and Airline Crew Coronavirus Disease 2019 COVID 19 U S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 4 March 2020 Retrieved 21 March 2020 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b Samantha Maiden 25 November 2020 PM Scott Morrison signals tough new COVID 19 vaccine rules for international travellers who fly to Australia News com au Retrieved 25 November 2020 Phillip Georgiadis 23 November 2020 Qantas to demand proof of Covid vaccination from international passengers Financial Times Retrieved 23 November 2020 Patrick Hatch 26 November 2020 No jab no fly COVID 19 vaccine key to opening borders travel leaders say The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 28 November 2020 Cameron Jenkins 24 November 2020 Airlines discussing requiring proof of COVID 19 vaccination for passengers report The Hill Retrieved 24 November 2020 Airlines mull mandatory COVID 19 vaccines for int l passengers Al Jazeera 24 November 2020 Retrieved 24 November 2020 KLM No plans to make Covid vaccine mandatory May need more gov t support NLTimes 24 November 2020 Retrieved 24 November 2020 Brussels Airlines will not make proof of coronavirus vaccination mandatory The Brussels Times 24 November 2020 Retrieved 25 November 2020 Conor Pope 24 November 2020 Covid jab Ryanair will not ask for proof of vaccination within EU The Irish Times Retrieved 25 November 2020 Grace Dean 25 November 2020 5 major airlines are rolling out shared digital health passes to prove negative COVID 19 tests They hope it s a step towards recovery for an industry set to lose 157 billion Business Insider Retrieved 28 November 2020 John Gapper 25 November 2020 Those who get vaccinated deserve more freedom Financial Times Retrieved 28 November 2020 Danish health ministry to develop Covid 19 vaccine passport The Local DK 26 November 2020 Retrieved 28 November 2020 Marie O Halloran 27 November 2020 System being planned to allow vaccinated airline passengers avoid restrictions The Irish Times Retrieved 28 November 2020 Murdock Sebastian 25 August 2021 Delta Air Lines To Impose Monthly Charge For Unvaccinated Employees HuffPost Retrieved 25 August 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Impact of the COVID 19 pandemic on commercial air transport amp oldid 1221199523, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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