Dubai stand during the Arabian Travel Market 2021 held at Dubai World Trade Centre. Dubai Airports chief Paul Griffiths said passenger travel will 'flood' back once global movement restrictions ease. Pawan Singh / The National.
Dubai stand during the Arabian Travel Market 2021 held at Dubai World Trade Centre. Dubai Airports chief Paul Griffiths said passenger travel will 'flood' back once global movement restrictions ease. Pawan Singh / The National.
Dubai stand during the Arabian Travel Market 2021 held at Dubai World Trade Centre. Dubai Airports chief Paul Griffiths said passenger travel will 'flood' back once global movement restrictions ease. Pawan Singh / The National.
Dubai stand during the Arabian Travel Market 2021 held at Dubai World Trade Centre. Dubai Airports chief Paul Griffiths said passenger travel will 'flood' back once global movement restrictions ease.

Dubai Airports chief projects return to pre-Covid passenger volumes by 2024


Deena Kamel
  • English
  • Arabic

International passenger volumes are projected to rebound to the pre-pandemic levels of 2019 by 2024, according to the chief executive of Dubai Airports.

Once travel restrictions in its major long-haul markets ease, Dubai is ready to return capacity quickly and expects a "flood" of passenger traffic, Paul Griffiths said at a summit during the Arabian Travel Market on Wednesday.

The airport can reopen Terminal 1, which is now in "suspended animation," within seven days and its Airbus A380 terminal in three weeks, he said. It could "easily" mobilise its pre-pandemic capacity of 95 million to 100 million passengers within a month, he added.

"We're ready to go and all we need now is the major easing of restrictions in the main markets to come and once that starts to happen, it won't be a trickle, it will be a flood," he said referring to the UK, Indian subcontinent, US and Australasia, among others. "Most of the major long-haul markets that we serve are under either closed border or travel restrictions."

The airport, which is the home base of long-haul giant Emirates, handled 25.9m passengers in 2020, a 70 per cent drop on 2019, as the Covid-19 pandemic paralysed the global travel industry.

"The entire aviation industry here is like a coiled spring ready to respond to the slightest easing of restrictions, and mobilising the capacity of the airport and airlines is something we're braced to do," Mr Griffiths said. "The recovery will be very, very rapid indeed - the problem is we don't know when the tipping point will come."

Prior to the pandemic, Dubai International Airport won approval to expand its capacity to 120 million passengers annually, up from about 100 million currently, by 2030, the executive said. These plans will be reviewed in the light of the ongoing recovery from the pandemic, a Dubai Airports spokesman later clarified.

The airport cut its workforce by 34 per cent in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, he said.

The global aviation industry is among the worst hit from the impact of the coronavirus pandemic that brought travel to a near-standstill as countries shut their borders. In a bid to conserve cash, airlines have laid off employees, deferred aircraft deliveries and sought government bailouts.

Episode list:

Ep1: A recovery like no other- the unevenness of the economic recovery 

Ep2: PCR and jobs - the future of work - new trends and challenges 

Ep3: The recovery and global trade disruptions - globalisation post-pandemic 

Ep4: Inflation- services and goods - debt risks 

Ep5: Travel and tourism 

One in nine do not have enough to eat

Created in 1961, the World Food Programme is pledged to fight hunger worldwide as well as providing emergency food assistance in a crisis.

One of the organisation’s goals is the Zero Hunger Pledge, adopted by the international community in 2015 as one of the 17 Sustainable Goals for Sustainable Development, to end world hunger by 2030.

The WFP, a branch of the United Nations, is funded by voluntary donations from governments, businesses and private donations.

Almost two thirds of its operations currently take place in conflict zones, where it is calculated that people are more than three times likely to suffer from malnutrition than in peaceful countries.

It is currently estimated that one in nine people globally do not have enough to eat.

On any one day, the WFP estimates that it has 5,000 lorries, 20 ships and 70 aircraft on the move.

Outside emergencies, the WFP provides school meals to up to 25 million children in 63 countries, while working with communities to improve nutrition. Where possible, it buys supplies from developing countries to cut down transport cost and boost local economies.

 

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