Friday, April 3, 2020

COVID-19 caused 77% collapse in global aviation

British Airways is to suspend more than 30,000 staff, from cabin crew to ground staff, engineers and head office employees, until the end of May under the government furlough scheme for companies hit by the coronavirus pandemic. (www.theguardian.com)

The COVID-19 crisis has brought the aviation industry to its knees. This week (30th March – 5th April), international airline seat capacity fell to just 23% of what it was in the first week of April last year. Just 10 million seats were still in service, to facilitate essential travel, compared with 44.2 million a year ago.

Looking back over the first quarter of the year, airline seat capacity is 9.4% down compared with Q1 2019. (482 million seats were in service in Q1 2020, compared with 532 million in Q1 2019.) At the start of January, capacity was slightly up on last year. However, it started to fall during the last week of January, when the Chinese government announced restrictions on outbound travel. From then until the middle of March, air capacity fell substantially; at which point it fell precipitously to the end of the month.

The top ten airlines still operating in the first week of April (30th March – 5th April) are: KLM, with 800,000 seats still in service, Qatar Airways, with nearly 500,000 seats in service and Ryanair with 400,000. They are followed in descending order by Delta, Air France, American, BA, Wizz Air, Cathay Pacific and Jeju.

(www.eturbonews.com)

 

Author:

0 comments: