Air travel is roaring back, but not without some significant hiccups.
Particularly in North America and Europe, travelers have described chaos at airports, with scores of flights canceled or delayed, luggage lost and wait times to board planes exceeding four hours. That’s partly the result of labor shortages from the pandemic, as layoffs have put pressure on airports and airlines facing a surge of summer passengers eager to travel.
Qantas CEO Alan Joyce, speaking to CNBC’s Dan Murphy about the sector’s recovery, said that after nearly two years of dramatically reduced activity, it’s going to take some time to get the system up and running smoothly again.
“The entire industry everywhere is experiencing this, and we’re seeing some of it in Australia,” Joyce said at the International Air Transport Association’s (IATA) 78th Annual General Meeting in Doha, Qatar, on Sunday.
It’s “not as bad as you’re seeing in Europe or in the North American market,” the CEO said. “We saw during Easter long queues at airports; nothing like you’ve seen in London, Manchester and Dublin and other places around Europe.
“And I think it does take a while. The system is rusty, everything was closed down for two years,” he added. “It is going to take awhile to get that system humming again. It’s a huge complicated business, there’s a lot of moving parts involved in it.”
IATA Director General Willie Walsh, in a separate interview from Doha, said airport chaos and delays are “isolated” and not every airport is experiencing problems, adding that in the “vast majority” of cases, flights are operating on schedule, without disruptions.
Nevertheless, he added that the airline industry isn’t yet “out of the woods” when it comes to recovery.
‘Demand is massive’
Still, for Qantas, Australia’s flagship carrier, the domestic comeback appears to be firing on all cylinders.
“It’s really good — in Australia, the domestic market, we’re seeing massive growth in demand, with demand for leisure over 120%, the corporate market and the SME markets back to 90% of pre-Covid levels, and so we have nearly full capacity restored in the domestic market,” Joyce said.
International flight recovery is “a little bit slower,” he said, at about 50% of pre-Covid levels. But he expects that by Christmas, international business will be at 85% of pre-Covid levels and that by “March next year we’ll get to 100%.”
“But demand is massive,” he added. “We’re having more demand internationally than, in some cases, we’ve seen before Covid, with less capacity, which is allowing us to recover fuels costs, get yields up.”