Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on aviation
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on the aviation industry due to travel restrictions and a slump in demand among travelers.
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 in order to diminish their losses. Airliner manufacturers and airport operators have also laid off employees. According to some commentators, the ensuing crisis is the worst ever encountered in the history of the aviation industry.
Flight cancellations
Government regulations in Europe and the United States mandate airlines to 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. Despite pleas from industry lobbyists to expand the regulations to allow travel credits, the US 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.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 over 80% flight movements were restricted across all regions. Research shows that world recovery of passenger demand to pre-COVID-19 levels is estimated to take 2.4 years, with the most optimistic estimate being 2 years, and the most pessimistic estimate 6 years. 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.
Air cargo
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.Adjusted cargo capacity fell by 4.4% in February 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, while cargo airlines bring back into service fuel-guzzling stored aircraft, helped by falling oil prices.
At the end of March, cargo capacity was down by 35% compared to the previous year: North America to Asia Pacific capacity fall by 17% Asia-Pacific to Europe was down by 30%, 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 March 2 and April 6, +158% to Europe and +90.5% to North America.
The cargo shortage may evaporate if the global economic crisis depresses demand: the WTO forecast a global trade contraction of 13–32% in 2020.
International mail between many countries stopped completely, either due to suspension of domestic service or lack of transportation.
Business aviation
Business aviation was less affected than airline traffic, in that top executives' travel is often considered as essential. London Biggin Hill Airport reported traffic to be around 30% of 2019 levels, with transatlantic traffic strong. 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.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.
Activity
On 5 March 2020, the International Air Transport Association estimated that the airline industry could lose between US$63 to 113 billion of revenues due to the reduced number of passengers. IATA had previously estimated revenue losses of around US$30 billion two weeks before their 5 March estimate. 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. IATA further revised their revenue loss estimate in 24 March to be $252 billion globally, a 44 percent drop. Another further estimate was published on 14 April, which forecasted a revenue drop fo $314 billion and a traffic drop of 48 percent in passenger count for 2020.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.
Oliver Wyman reported that Asian airlines reduced their available seat miles by 23 percent in March 2020. In Europe, the impact of the outbreak is expected to accelerate corporate consolidation in the airline industry. According to consultancy CAPA Centre for Aviation, most airlines would be bankrupted by the end of May 2020.
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. 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. Despite a lack of passengers, regulations regarding flight slots initially compelled British airlines to fly empty planes to European airports in order to avoid losing their slots. Fuel prices dropping by around a quarter could not compensate for the fall in demand. Google Trends indicate that airline customer service departments have received the largest rise in online searches between February and March 2020 than any other customer service department over that time period.
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 fleetshastening the retirement of older aircraft and maintaining planned deliveries of new, more fuel-efficient modelsor by retaining older planes and reducing capital expenditure on new aircraft.
By mid-April, 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 or Asia ; and affecting Narrow-body aircraft less than wide-body aircraft. 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.
In April 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.
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.
Boeing anticipates passenger traffic recovering in two to three years to 2019 levels, but expects production to take longer.
The Airports Council International estimates 4.6 billion less 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.
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.
By mid-April, 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 North America with a 50/50 split, then Europe with one third still stored.
Major airliner deliveries dropped from a typical 90-100 aircraft a month to an average of less than 40 in the first half of 2020.
By sector
Airlines
Aircraft manufacturers
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%.- 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. Monthly production was cut to four A220s, forty A320s, two A330s and six A350s. 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. In 2020, capital expenditure should be reduced by €700 million to €1.9 billion.
- Boeing froze hiring and reportedly laid off employees due to a large number of cancellations, which outpaced new orders in February 2020. On 11 March, it was revealed that Boeing was to exercise its whole US$13.8 billion loan facility. Prior to the pandemic, Boeing's business had been impacted by groundings of its 737 MAX aircraft. By 7 April, Boeing had indefinitely suspended production at Boeing South Carolina and Puget Sound, Washington, completely halting the assembly of its commercial aircraft. On 21 April, Boeing announced a management structure overhaul. On 27 May, it announced plans to lay off 12,000 employees, while it reported zero new orders in April 2020.
- Bombardier on 26 March 2020 announced a suspension of most Canadian production in Ontario and Quebec, in addition to halting production in Northern Ireland. 12,400 Bombardier employees in Canada were furloughed.
- Embraer reported deferment of orders of its commercial aircraft. It also suspended its financial guidance for 2020. On 25 April, Boeing announced it has terminated the planned Boeing–Embraer joint venture after the 24 April delay expired, attributing it to Embraer's failure to meet conditions. Later on 25 April, 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. Industry analysts attributed Boeing's actions to the collapse in demand for airliners resulting from the pandemic, and to a desire to avert the potentially controversial perception that government pandemic relief funds meant to support U.S. jobs were instead disbursed to a Brazilian firm.
- 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.
- Aero engine manufacturer Rolls-Royce planned to cut 9,000 jobs, mainly in its civil aerospace division, and mainly affecting its UK site at Derby.
- Textron Inc., the parent company of Textron Aviation and Bell Helicopter, announced a 1,950 jobs layoff.
- 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 15-20 years, adding that there is scope for optimism in the domestic industry.
Airports
- On the 5th of May, Airports Council International World estimated that in 2020, passenger traffic worldwide would amount to less than half of what was previously projected for the year.
- By the middle of April, the Airports Council International observed a 95% fall in traffic in 18 airports in major aviation markets in Asia-Pacific and the Middle East.
- Westchester County Airport closed to airlines for about a month starting on 27 April 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.
- UK airports axed expansion plans valued at £1 billion.
- Despite significantly lower traffic than normal, Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport was the world's busiest airport in May 2020 measured by aircraft movements. American Airlines' diminished point-to-point routes and instead sent traffic through its DFW hub. This created traffic volumes surpassing those at the normally busier O'Hare International Airport and Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport by substantial margins.
- Orly airport in Paris was closed to commercial traffic from April 1st to June 25th, 2020.
- Various overseas airlines are storing their aircraft in Alice Springs Airport in Australia.
- Delta Air Lines announced it will indefinitely suspend flights to/from Flint due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on aviation. Delta announced that the airport's sole remaining service to Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport|Atlanta will permanently stop on July 8, 2020.
Regulators
- In March 2020, the United States Federal Aviation Administration 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.
- The FAA announced on 23 April 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.
Government
- On 8 June 2020, the Austrian conservative–green coalition government concluded a support deal for Austrian Airlines for 150 million euros in taxpayer grants, and 300 euros in banking loans that are to be paid back. This was significantly less than expected, and came under the stringent conditions to restrict short-distance airline operations, to ban cheap tickets below 40 euros and include a 12 euro environmental tax to each ticket, and to half its CO2 emissions by 2030.
Other organizations
- Many United States general aviation social events and fly-ins scheduled for the spring of 2020 were cancelled or postponed, including Sun 'n Fun and several conducted by the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association.
- On 1 May, citing uncertainty about COVID-19 social restrictions imposed by the state of Wisconsin, Experimental Aircraft Association CEO and Chairman of the Board Jack J. Pelton announced the cancellation of EAA AirVenture Oshkosh for 2020.
- Air charter company JetSuite ceased flight operations on 15 April and its parent company filed for bankruptcy on 28 April; CEO Alex Wilcox attributed the company's collapse to a 90% drop in business due to widespread stay-at-home orders.
- Travel technology company Sabre Corporation furloughed one third of its workforce on 23 April, citing an 81% drop in revenue due to drastically reduced airline and other travel bookings. Sabre had previously cut salaries by 20%, suspended 401 pension contributions, cut various other expenses, and obtained a US$1.1 billion loan, but these steps reportedly failed to offset losses.
By country
- : 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. 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 costed as little as 29 Yuan. Passenger traffic between 25 January and 14 February dropped by 75 percent compared to the same period in 2019. 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 's guideline. Since 29 March, all international flights to and from China are reduced, with flight limit. Since 4 June, CAAC decided to allow more foreign airlines to operate passenger flights to China from 8 June, while "circuit-breaker" measures would also be implemented.
- : 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 3-4 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
- : In April 2020, Fiji Airways suspended all international flights and the main international airport in Nadi was closed. As a result, the national airline terminated more than 700 employees. On May 26, the government issued guarantees in support of FJ$450 million worth of initiatives aimed at strengthening Fiji Airway's cash reserves.
- : Indian airlines are estimated to report a loss of US$600 million for the January–March quarter. The government of India is planning a rescue package for the aviation industry for as much as ₹120 billion.
- : 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. After implementing health guidelines, the ban on passenger flights was lifted on 7 May, starting with the resumptions of domestic passenger flights.
- : Due to the outbreak and the ensuing national lockdown, thousands of flights to and from Italy were cancelled.
- : 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.
- : From March 2020 in order to prevent the importation and spread of coronavirus infection, all aircraft including domestic and international were banned arriving in Nepal.
- : The Government of Pakistan had allowed domestic flights to resume, following suspension during the COVID-19 pandemic on 16 May. Six days later, Pakistan International Airlines Flight 8303 crashed in Karachi from Lahore.
- : 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.
- : 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.
- : From March 2020 in order to prevent the importation and spread of coronavirus infection, all aircraft arriving in Turkmenistan from abroad are redirected to the Turkmenabat International Airport. 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.
- : Multiple airlines waived fees for flight booking changes and cancellations during the coronavirus outbreak following a request from Sen. Richard Blumenthal. Between 20 January and 7 March 2020, stock prices in US airlines decreased by 30 percent. Flight fares for domestic flights also dropped.
Travel and the spread of the coronavirus