Qatar Airways chief suggests Brexit factor in London Heathrow issues
Qatar Airways CEO Akbar Al Baker has made the implication that the UK’s departure from the EU, or Brexit, may be a contributing factor in the staffing-related operational woes at its airports this summer. “Another mistake is, with Brexit, there are certain professions that cannot be done by non-British. These are the kind of works that were being done by people who were coming from the continent,” Al Baker said at the Farnborough Air Show in the UK on July 19. While he declined to directly attribute the operational constraints at London’s Heathrow and Gatwick airports to Brexit, the implication was that the UK’s leaving the EU in 2020 has contributed to the labor challenges many industries face in the country, and around the world. People who would otherwise work at truck drivers or tug operators at airports can find better paying jobs in other sectors that also do not require a several-month long security clearance process, said Al Baker. London Heathrow capped numbers at 100,000 passengers a day earlier in July. The restrictions, which airport CEO John Holland-Kaye said was to protect flights for the “vast majority of passengers” and give them “confidence” in a reliable journey, will continue into September. The move followed a cap on the number of flights at Gatwick airport in June that extends through August. Holland-Kaye attributed the limits to understaffed ground handling operations at the airport. “It’s having a huge financial impact on airlines,” Al Baker said of the Heathrow cap, as well as those at other airports around Europe. To be fair, it’s not just a Heathrow issue, Amsterdam and Frankfurt have also restricted capacity to ease operational issues this summer. Staffing issues have impacted airline operations in Australia, Canada, and the US as well. Qatar Airways reduced capacity at Heathrow by 30-40% following the introduction the cap, Al Baker said. It is achieving that by both capping the number of passengers on flights, as well as pulling down its schedule. He added that the short notice that airlines were given to reduce capacity — they were expected to meet the caps within days of the airport’s notice — into the airport was “very difficult.”<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2022-07-21/oneworld/qatar-airways-chief-suggests-brexit-factor-in-london-heathrow-issues
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Qatar Airways chief suggests Brexit factor in London Heathrow issues
Qatar Airways CEO Akbar Al Baker has made the implication that the UK’s departure from the EU, or Brexit, may be a contributing factor in the staffing-related operational woes at its airports this summer. “Another mistake is, with Brexit, there are certain professions that cannot be done by non-British. These are the kind of works that were being done by people who were coming from the continent,” Al Baker said at the Farnborough Air Show in the UK on July 19. While he declined to directly attribute the operational constraints at London’s Heathrow and Gatwick airports to Brexit, the implication was that the UK’s leaving the EU in 2020 has contributed to the labor challenges many industries face in the country, and around the world. People who would otherwise work at truck drivers or tug operators at airports can find better paying jobs in other sectors that also do not require a several-month long security clearance process, said Al Baker. London Heathrow capped numbers at 100,000 passengers a day earlier in July. The restrictions, which airport CEO John Holland-Kaye said was to protect flights for the “vast majority of passengers” and give them “confidence” in a reliable journey, will continue into September. The move followed a cap on the number of flights at Gatwick airport in June that extends through August. Holland-Kaye attributed the limits to understaffed ground handling operations at the airport. “It’s having a huge financial impact on airlines,” Al Baker said of the Heathrow cap, as well as those at other airports around Europe. To be fair, it’s not just a Heathrow issue, Amsterdam and Frankfurt have also restricted capacity to ease operational issues this summer. Staffing issues have impacted airline operations in Australia, Canada, and the US as well. Qatar Airways reduced capacity at Heathrow by 30-40% following the introduction the cap, Al Baker said. It is achieving that by both capping the number of passengers on flights, as well as pulling down its schedule. He added that the short notice that airlines were given to reduce capacity — they were expected to meet the caps within days of the airport’s notice — into the airport was “very difficult.”<br/>