Summary
- The aviation sector is now banking on technology to help turn around the grim situation and give people confidence to fly again in the face of a pandemic whose end remains unpredictable.
- Multinational information technology company, Société Internationale de Télécommunications Aéronautiques (SITA), says innovation will have a big role in lifting air transport from the prevailing abyss of financial distress.
The impact of Covid-19 on the global aviation industry has been
severe to say the least. Flight schedules have been cut down by up to 80
percent since May as many countries closed their borders to reduce the
spread of the virus.
The aviation sector is now banking
on technology to help turn around the grim situation and give people
confidence to fly again in the face of a pandemic whose end remains
unpredictable.
Multinational information technology
company, Société Internationale de Télécommunications Aéronautiques
(SITA), says innovation will have a big role in lifting air transport
from the prevailing abyss of financial distress.
"Technology
can help increase confidence and ensure compliance with evolving
regulations. However, any hardware and software solutions for passenger
processing must be resilient and flexible in order to empower airports
to adapt to fluctuating passenger volumes,” says Maneesh Jaikrishna,
SITA’s Vice President - Indian Subcontinent, Dubai, Eastern &
Southern Africa.
“ The technology must deliver the
experience passengers want, while also improving efficiency and reducing
costs for the airport," Mr Jaikrishna says.
To successfully navigate a return to the skies for viable
volumes of passengers, airports and airlines will have to assimilate new
information from governments and health officials, adapt novel
operations immediately and automate processes permanently. All this will
mean adopting the latest technology.
SITA says the pandemic is a new industry-defining challenge that will transform aviation operations across the board.
"Health
is the new 9/11. Airlines and airports must now adopt new safety
measures to keep air travel attractive and viable. Greater emphasis and
focus must be placed on passenger experience, efficiency and
sustainability," says Mr Jaikrishna.
With passengers
demanding reassurance of safety, focus is fast shifting to automated
operations that play an important role in reducing queues and touch
points in airports as passenger volumes begin to recover and social
distancing becomes increasingly difficult. Digital border controls will
ensure passenger health and safety.
Kenya Airways chief
executive officer Allan Kilavuka, says the airline is giving priority
to the health and safety of passengers and crew. This, he notes, means
the airline will have to embrace technological changes and create
innovative solutions, to make aviation regulatory processes and
governance more streamlined and responsive to future crises.
According
to a new aviation report by the International Civil Aviation
Organization (ICAO), lessons learned from the flexible work and meeting
arrangements, accelerated digitalisation, and ad-hoc, fast-tracking of
proposals should all be incorporated into the aviation regulatory
operational processes, if airlines are to emerge stronger in
post-Covid-19 period.
"The air transport industry will
need to seize the momentum for a better analysis of the measures and
steps taken during the crisis which will serve as foundation for
defining a more resilient, sustainable aviation sector in the future,"
states the Guidelines for Air Travel through Covid-19 report.
Travel
authorisation, bag-drop, check in and more activities can be
facilitated away from the airport to reduce passenger queuing and to
enable more social distancing, meaning passengers can arrive checked in
and ready to travel.
Mr Jaikrishna says Health ETAs
(Electronic Travel Authorization) can help further speed up the process,
especially by using biometrically-enabled, secure mobile technology
which allows governments to instantly check digital declarations before
passengers travel. "A seamless journey through the airport is crucial to
reducing the risk of Covid-19 infection. SITA gives passengers a
contactless experience, thanks to biometrics capable of enrolling then
recognising faces with masks on and passengers being able to use their
mobile phone as a remote control for travel,” he says.
"Touchless
bag tagging and digital boarding pass stamps at security are just some
of the examples of minimising the need for passengers to touch airport
infrastructure or physically contact staff." he expounds. SITA now
provides health-aware border checks on arrival, linked to pre-checked
identity, journey, and health information.
Processing
passengers via biometric-enabled gates compared to traditional border
checkpoints is faster than ever and completely touchless, and that
further reduces the time of exposure in the airport, congestion levels
and contact points.
With technology to record every
passenger's details during a flight, airlines can know passengers
arriving from high-risk areas who can then be asked to self-isolate at
home for 14 days.
Experts say the question of how the
aviation industry can thrive in a significantly smaller market with
prolonged uncertainty has become critical, but the sector must
collectively shift towards sustainable, long-term, future-proof
solutions that offer longevity and cost efficiency benefits.
"For
many airports, these are just bolt-on solutions to existing
technologies and platforms. Introducing resilient and agile systems that
increase efficiencies and can respond to unpredictable fluxes in
passenger numbers will become the determining factor for a sustainable
future," Mr Jaikrishna observes.
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