In-flight Wi-Fi boom shows travel is changing in Covid era
Thousands of passenger planes are still grounded, but in-flight internet is surging to new highs. Data traffic over satellite company Inmarsat Group Holdings' European Aviation Network rose to a record in the final week of August, according to CEO Rupert Pearce. Global airline traffic was still down almost 80% in July compared to the same month a year earlier. “It suggests there’s some semblance of normality beginning to return to some segments of the aviation market,” Pearce said. He pointed to a partial recovery in short and medium-haul flights after pandemic travel restrictions were eased. The data rebound also reflects new internet habits formed under lockdown, said Alexander Grous, an expert on airline strategy and economics at the London School of Economics, who has previously written research on behalf of Inmarsat. “Lots of users are basically two to three times more likely now to connect and stay connected on board than they were at the beginning of the year, before Covid,” Grous said by phone. The potential for an airline data boom may reassure the institutions that bought Inmarsat last December in the UK’s second-biggest take-private deal of 2019. The $3.4 acquisition by Apax Partners, Warburg Pincus, Canada Pension Plan Investment Board and Ontario Teachers Pension Plan was partly a bet on surging airline connectivity.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2020-09-09/general/in-flight-wi-fi-boom-shows-travel-is-changing-in-covid-era
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In-flight Wi-Fi boom shows travel is changing in Covid era
Thousands of passenger planes are still grounded, but in-flight internet is surging to new highs. Data traffic over satellite company Inmarsat Group Holdings' European Aviation Network rose to a record in the final week of August, according to CEO Rupert Pearce. Global airline traffic was still down almost 80% in July compared to the same month a year earlier. “It suggests there’s some semblance of normality beginning to return to some segments of the aviation market,” Pearce said. He pointed to a partial recovery in short and medium-haul flights after pandemic travel restrictions were eased. The data rebound also reflects new internet habits formed under lockdown, said Alexander Grous, an expert on airline strategy and economics at the London School of Economics, who has previously written research on behalf of Inmarsat. “Lots of users are basically two to three times more likely now to connect and stay connected on board than they were at the beginning of the year, before Covid,” Grous said by phone. The potential for an airline data boom may reassure the institutions that bought Inmarsat last December in the UK’s second-biggest take-private deal of 2019. The $3.4 acquisition by Apax Partners, Warburg Pincus, Canada Pension Plan Investment Board and Ontario Teachers Pension Plan was partly a bet on surging airline connectivity.<br/>