UK: Aviation needs government support for new lockdown pain: airport boss
Britain's airports and airlines need urgent support to survive the "very bleak future" posed by a new lockdown in England, warned the boss of one of the country's biggest airport groups. Very low levels of travel in recent months have put airlines and airports under renewed financial strain after they were effectively shut during Britain's first lockdown, and they now face another month without income during its second. "An urgent package of support must materialise," said Manchester Airport Group's (MAG) CE Charlie Cornish Monday. He said the new lockdown for England, due to start on Thursday and which bans international leisure travel, will make parts of the aviation sector unsustainable. Before the pandemic, Britain had a thriving aviation sector. Air transport and related supply chain activity plus tourist arrivals supported 1.6m jobs and accounted for 4.5% of UK GDP according to an IATA study. But more than 20,000 jobs have now been lost at UK airlines, and Heathrow, once the busiest airport in Europe, has lost its crown to Paris. Industry executives blame the UK government's 14-day quarantine rules, and the comparatively slow adoption of allowing testing to replace the need for isolation, for exacerbating the pain.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2020-11-03/general/uk-aviation-needs-government-support-for-new-lockdown-pain-airport-boss
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UK: Aviation needs government support for new lockdown pain: airport boss
Britain's airports and airlines need urgent support to survive the "very bleak future" posed by a new lockdown in England, warned the boss of one of the country's biggest airport groups. Very low levels of travel in recent months have put airlines and airports under renewed financial strain after they were effectively shut during Britain's first lockdown, and they now face another month without income during its second. "An urgent package of support must materialise," said Manchester Airport Group's (MAG) CE Charlie Cornish Monday. He said the new lockdown for England, due to start on Thursday and which bans international leisure travel, will make parts of the aviation sector unsustainable. Before the pandemic, Britain had a thriving aviation sector. Air transport and related supply chain activity plus tourist arrivals supported 1.6m jobs and accounted for 4.5% of UK GDP according to an IATA study. But more than 20,000 jobs have now been lost at UK airlines, and Heathrow, once the busiest airport in Europe, has lost its crown to Paris. Industry executives blame the UK government's 14-day quarantine rules, and the comparatively slow adoption of allowing testing to replace the need for isolation, for exacerbating the pain.<br/>