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Pandemic Results in Historic Decline in Air Passenger Traffic

With severe limitations to international travel still in place, the IATA expects 2021 to be another down year for battered passenger airlines.
With severe limitations to international travel still in place, the IATA expects 2021 to be another down year for battered passenger airlines.
pandemic results in historic decline in air passenger traffic
Representative image. Photo: Reuters/Kai Pfaffenbach
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As international travel came to a near-complete standstill in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the aviation industry suffered what it describes as “the worst year in history for air travel demand”. According to the International Air Transport Association (IATA), global passenger traffic as measured in revenue passenger kilometres declined by 65.9% compared to 2019, as international passenger demand dropped 75.6% and domestic demand fell 48.8% below 2019 levels.

“Last year was a catastrophe. There is no other way to describe it. What recovery there was over the Northern hemisphere summer season stalled in autumn and the situation turned dramatically worse over the year-end holiday season, as more severe travel restrictions were imposed in the face of new outbreaks and new strains of COVID-19,” said Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s Director General and CEO.

To make things worse, there’s no real end in sight to the unprecedented crisis. With severe limitations to international travel still in place in early February, the IATA expects 2021 to be another down year for battered passenger airlines. “The world is more locked down today than at virtually any point in the past 12 months and passengers face a bewildering array of rapidly changing and globally uncoordinated travel restrictions,” de Juniac said, while urging governments to help the industry stay afloat.

Also read: International Flights to Remain Suspended Till February 28

As the following chart shows, the IATA predicts air travel demand to reach just 50% of 2019 levels in 2021, even in its more optimistic scenario. If the new strains of the virus continue to take hold, things could be even worse and recovery could be limited to just 13% above 2020 levels, leaving the industry at 38% of 2019 passenger demand.

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You will find more infographics at Statista.

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This article was originally published on Statista.

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This article went live on February twelfth, two thousand twenty one, at zero minutes past seven in the morning.

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