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Air France-KLM flags financial hit from tourists avoiding Paris Olympics

Air France-KLM has warned it expects to take a financial hit because a “significant” number of would-be visitors have avoided booking trips to Paris during the Olympic Games. The airline group said traffic to and from the French capital was “lagging behind other major European cities” ahead of the games, which will run between July 26 and August 11. “International markets show a significant avoidance of Paris,” the company said in a statement on Monday, citing bookings patterns at both Air France and Air France-KLM’s low-cost airline Transavia. French visitors “seem to be postponing their holidays” until after the games or making alternative plans, the company added. It also cited data from the Paris Tourist Office published last month, which forecast that hotel bookings would be down over the summer. The company expects a negative impact of between E160m and E180m on revenues between June and August.  Analysts at Bernstein said this suggested an overall 13% reduction in the consensus pre-tax profit forecast of E1.35b this year. Travel to and from France was expected to “normalise” after the Olympics, Air France-KLM said, with “encouraging demand levels” for the end of August and the month of September. The warnings come despite forecasts from tourism officials that 15mn visitors will come to Paris for the games. Polls show that half of the city’s residents plan to leave temporarily, and one government minister has urged people to work from home or go elsewhere to avoid transport disruption. There have also been signs of an oversupply of accommodation during the games, with a glut of listings on Airbnb pushing down prices.<br/>

Korean Air to stop providing cabin services 40 minutes before landing for safety of passengers

Korean Air, the country’s flag carrier and largest airline, said Monday that its cabin crew will stop providing cabin services 40 minutes before landing, as the company moves to strengthen safety rules in the wake of recent turbulence incidents. This announcement comes after a severe case of turbulence reported on May 21 by Singapore Airlines, an accident that left one passenger dead and dozens of others injured on a flight traveling to Singapore from London. Korean Air’s policy change aims to reduce the risks of safety incidents, including in turbulence-related scenarios, by giving flight attendants more time to focus on the safety of passengers and themselves before landing, the period when most inflight accidents occur. Previously, the company provided services up until 20 minutes before landing. A Korean Air official said the number of cases of turbulence its planes encountered has increased in recent years, with some experts predicting more frequent encounters in the future because of global warming-induced changes in wind velocity at high altitudes.<br/>