Heathrow overtaken as Europe's busiest airport amid pandemic
- Published
Heathrow says it has been overtaken as Europe's busiest airport for the first time by Paris Charles de Gaulle because of a slump in demand for air travel.
Some 19 million passengers travelled through Heathrow in the first nine months of the year, compared with 19.3 million who used the airport in the French capital.
Heathrow said Amsterdam Schiphol and Frankfurt were "close behind".
It said all three airports had embraced testing regimes so had reopened faster.
By contrast, Britain had been "too slow" to embrace passenger testing as a way of people reducing or avoiding quarantine and was "falling behind".
It came as Heathrow reported an 84% fall in passenger numbers for the three months to 30 September.
"Already in France and Germany, even Canada and Ireland have moved to testing and this is the way to make sure we can protect jobs in the UK as well as protecting people from coronavirus," Mr Holland Kaye told the BBC.
"The government really need to get on and make this happen before the beginning of December if we are going to save people's jobs."
'No commitment'
Transport Secretary Grant Shapps has said he wants to have post-arrivals testing up and running in the UK by 1 December.
This would reduce the amount of time arrivals from high risk destinations had to spend in quarantine from 14 days - seen as a big deterrent to travel - to a week.
But Mr Holland Kaye said the industry still needed a "commitment" it would happen.
He added that the only way to really revive air travel was to bring in widespread pre-departure testing that met internationally agreed standards.
Before the pandemic Heathrow would always boast that it was the biggest airport in Europe.
So it's striking that when announcing its unsurprisingly dreadful financial results, the airport has gone out of its way to underline the fact that it no longer holds that title.
Of course, all of the world's airports are seeing record low passenger numbers right now and not even a crystal ball will tell you what the picture will be next year and beyond.
But by announcing that Paris Charles de Gaulle has robbed it of Europe's top spot, Heathrow is subtly taking aim at the UK government.
UK aviation bosses are fed up that ministers have still not approved a testing regime for passengers arriving into the country as a way of people avoiding a two week quarantine.
The warning from Heathrow is clear; if the UK doesn't act quickly to help its aviation sector recover then passenger traffic will head elsewhere and even more jobs will be lost at home.
The airport has already begun offering pre-departure testing, but only for passengers travelling to destinations that require it.
He urged the UK government to speed up talks with the US over creating a "pilot air bridge" for such as scheme.
"That is the best way to make sure we are no longer importing Covid and also that people can travel with confidence."
Heathrow, which is already cutting 500 jobs, said its losses had widened to £1.5bn in the first nine months of the year.
It also revised its forecasts for passenger numbers next year to 22.6 million - less than a quarter of 2019 levels.
But it said its finances were solid and it had reserves to tide it over until 2023.
The air travel industry has been hit hard by coronavirus, with airlines such as British Airways and Easyjet slashing thousands of jobs.
The International Air Transport Association, which represents 290 airlines, estimates that air traffic will not return to pre-pandemic levels until at least 2024.
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