Airports see smoother summer travel than 2022 but brace for headaches
Global airports expect smoother travel this summer as staffing improves, but surging passenger demand during peak periods in Europe and North America could still bring long lines, baggage piles and delayed flights, an industry group said. Airports, airlines and government agencies have been staffing up to avoid crippling labour shortages that curbed capacity and led to travel headaches last summer. Global passenger demand is expected to recover to pre-pandemic levels on most routes in 2023, adding pressure to a stretched industry. "The summer months are indeed expected to be challenging at times for Europe, North America and some parts of Southeast Asia as passenger loads are expected to increase and reach levels in some places close to or even above 2019 levels," said Thomas Romig, vice president, safety, security and operations at airport trade group ACI World. Most airport executives gathered at an Airports Council International meeting this week on France's Reunion Island forecast any summer disruption was likely to be during peak traffic periods rather than run for the entire season, Romig said. Amsterdam's Schiphol airport and others might not have enough staff until the end of June, Air France-KLM CFO Steven Zaat told reporters.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2023-02-20/general/airports-see-smoother-summer-travel-than-2022-but-brace-for-headaches
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Airports see smoother summer travel than 2022 but brace for headaches
Global airports expect smoother travel this summer as staffing improves, but surging passenger demand during peak periods in Europe and North America could still bring long lines, baggage piles and delayed flights, an industry group said. Airports, airlines and government agencies have been staffing up to avoid crippling labour shortages that curbed capacity and led to travel headaches last summer. Global passenger demand is expected to recover to pre-pandemic levels on most routes in 2023, adding pressure to a stretched industry. "The summer months are indeed expected to be challenging at times for Europe, North America and some parts of Southeast Asia as passenger loads are expected to increase and reach levels in some places close to or even above 2019 levels," said Thomas Romig, vice president, safety, security and operations at airport trade group ACI World. Most airport executives gathered at an Airports Council International meeting this week on France's Reunion Island forecast any summer disruption was likely to be during peak traffic periods rather than run for the entire season, Romig said. Amsterdam's Schiphol airport and others might not have enough staff until the end of June, Air France-KLM CFO Steven Zaat told reporters.<br/>