Premature Return to Pre-Pandemic Slot Rules Risks Continued Passenger Disruption

Geneva – WEBWIRE


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The Worldwide Air Transportation Association (IATA) expressed worry that a untimely return to pre-pandemic slot use procedures in the EU this winter pitfalls continuing disruption to passengers.

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The European Commission has introduced it intends to return to the longstanding 80-20 slot use rule, which involves airlines to operate at least 80% of every single prepared slot sequence. Global slot regulations are an successful system for handling access to and the use of scarce capability at airports. The system has stood the exam of time and while airways are eager to restart products and services, the failure of quite a few key airports to accommodate desire, coupled with rising air site visitors regulate delays, usually means a untimely return to the 80-20 rule could guide to even more passenger disruption.

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The evidence so significantly this summertime has not been encouraging. Airports had the 2022 summer season season schedules and ultimate slot holdings in January and didn’t appraise how to handle this in time. Airports declaring that whole capacity is out there and then necessitating airways to make cuts this summer season demonstrates the procedure is not prepared for reviving “normal” slot use this winter season period (which commences at end of Oct).

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“The chaos we have seen at specified airports this summertime has transpired with a slot use threshold of 64%. We are concerned that airports will not be prepared in time to provider an 80% threshold by the stop of Oct. It is vital the Member States and Parliament modify the Commission’s proposal to a realistic stage and permit adaptability to the slot use policies. Airports are equal associates in the slot approach, let them display their capability to declare and control their ability accurately and competently and then restore the slot use future summer months,” claimed Willie Walsh, IATA’s Director Standard.

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IATA (International Air Transportation Association) represents some 290 airlines comprising 83% of world air website traffic.

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