QA3

Travel quarantine threatens to keep planes grounded, warns BA owner

Coronavirus travel quarantine threatens to keep planes grounded, says BA owner | Business News | Sky News Skip to content

Coronavirus travel quarantine threatens to keep planes grounded, says BA owner

Airlines chief Willie Walsh says the move is "definitely going to make it worse" for the industry stricken by the global pandemic.

Tail Fins of British Airways planes are seen parked at Heathrow airport as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, London, Britain, March 31, 2020. REUTERS/Toby Melville
'Nothing positive' in PM's lockdown easing plan
Why you can trust Sky News

British Airways' owner has warned its flights face being grounded for longer with Boris Johnson's travel quarantine plans.

Willie Walsh, chief executive of BA's parent company, International Airlines Group, said the move was "definitely going to make it worse" for the industry, already hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic.

He told MPs the business would now need to review its plans to resume flights from July.

preview image
PM reveals next steps in lockdown speech

Speaking to the Commons Transport Select Committee, Mr Walsh also insisted that the plan to shed up to 12,000 jobs at BA was driven by the need to ensure the survival of the airline given the "greatest crisis" ever seen by the sector.

He estimated it could now be as late as 2024 before demand returned to levels before the COVID-19 pandemic.

Mr Walsh was giving evidence to MPs after the prime minister said it would "soon be the time" to bring in a 14-day quarantine period for air passengers to prevent infections from abroad.

Highlighting the "very severe, very significant crisis" facing the industry, Mr Walsh said: "The announcement of a 14-day period (for people) coming into the UK, it's definitely going to make it worse.

More from British Airways

"There's nothing positive in anything that I heard the prime minister say," he added.

"We had been planning to resume - on a pretty significant basis - our flying in July.

"I think we'd have to review that based on what the prime minister said."

This picture shows British Airways planes grounded at Heathrow's airport terminal 5, in west London, on March 16, 2020. - IAG, the owner of British Airways and Spanish carrier Iberia, said Monday it would slash the group's flight capacity by 75 percent during April and May owing to the coronavirus outbreak. "For April and May, the Group plans to reduce capacity by at least 75 percent compared to the same period in 2019," it said in a statement. (Photo by Adrian DENNIS / AFP) (Photo by ADRIAN DEN
British Airways considers redundancies

He told MPs that BA's capacity to operate will be "pretty minimal" with an imposed quarantine.

He added: "Despite the fact that there had been some rumours about this quarantine period, I don't think anybody believed that the UK government would actually implement it if they were serious about getting the economy moving again."

Pressed by members of the committee over the job losses, Mr Walsh, whose group also includes Iberia and Aer Lingus, said: "We are not picking on British Airways.

"We're not doing anything that we don't think is absolutely necessary to secure the survival of British Airways and we're doing exactly the same with the other airlines in the group."

How airlines are responding to COVID challenge

Mr Walsh said: "Our restructuring is solely driven by the fact that we are now in the deepest downturn that the aviation industry has ever seen.

"I don't think I need to hide the scale of it, because it's obvious to everybody. We're not flying our aircraft to transport passengers."

He added: "The industry has changed and anybody who believes that we're going back to the way things were in 2019 misunderstands the scale of the challenge that is being faced."



Bookmarking:

<< News
Powered By: BriefYourMarket.com QA3