India's air passenger traffic to double in next 20 years: IATA
IATA on Wednesday said that it expects the number of passengers flying to, from or within India to double in the next 20 years. The IATA said that India is even looking at trebling the passenger numbers by 2037 when some 500m people are expected to fly. In response to this projected growth, IATA released a paper that suggested ways to improve processes as infrastructure capacity expansion cannot keep up with the speed of traffic growth. According to the paper, in most of Indian airports, a number of processes remain manual and are not so efficient. "When it comes to security, while today's aviation security measures work, it is an archaic one-size-fits-all platform that comes at great cost to airlines, airports, authorities and passengers. Imposing new and or additional measures, or simply replacing screening equipment, are not robust enough to ensure security and facilitation effectiveness and will not be adequate to cater to the increased number of travellers in the coming years," it said. One of the key suggestion is to allow a Mobile Boarding Pass (MBP).<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2019-03-07/general/indias-air-passenger-traffic-to-double-in-next-20-years-iata
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India's air passenger traffic to double in next 20 years: IATA
IATA on Wednesday said that it expects the number of passengers flying to, from or within India to double in the next 20 years. The IATA said that India is even looking at trebling the passenger numbers by 2037 when some 500m people are expected to fly. In response to this projected growth, IATA released a paper that suggested ways to improve processes as infrastructure capacity expansion cannot keep up with the speed of traffic growth. According to the paper, in most of Indian airports, a number of processes remain manual and are not so efficient. "When it comes to security, while today's aviation security measures work, it is an archaic one-size-fits-all platform that comes at great cost to airlines, airports, authorities and passengers. Imposing new and or additional measures, or simply replacing screening equipment, are not robust enough to ensure security and facilitation effectiveness and will not be adequate to cater to the increased number of travellers in the coming years," it said. One of the key suggestion is to allow a Mobile Boarding Pass (MBP).<br/>