Aviation sector eyes recovery in 2023-24


Viet Nam's aviation market is hoped to recover in 2023-24, according to a Vietnam Airlines' representative.

Tho Xuan Airport in Thanh Hoa Province. Vietnam Airlines and Vietjet Air have deployed the IATA Travel Pass, an electronic health passport application. — VNA/VNS Photo Duy Khuong

Viet Nam's aviation market is hoped to recover in 2023-24, according to a Vietnam Airlines' representative.

The international tourist market may need 2-3 years to recover to 2019 levels, while the domestic market can recover strongly as soon as the epidemic is under control, according to experts from aviation organisations and Vietnam Airlines.

“Viet Nam's aviation market is forcast to resume to the same performance of 2019 by 2023 in an optimistic scenario and by 2024 in a more cautious scenario,” said Dang Ngoc Hoa, chairman of Vietnam Airlines' Board of Directors.

To achieve this, Vietnam Airlines hopes that the Government, ministries and sectors would continue helping the domestic aviation industry to overcome difficulties this year and create favourable conditions for future recovery, Hoa said.

Dinh Viet Thang, director of the Civil Aviation Authority of Viet Nam, said the domestic aviation market was expected to improve in the second half of 2021 when the COVID-19 vaccine rollout is accelerated in Viet Nam and abroad.

Many key markets for Viet Nam's aviation industry such as Northeast Asia and Europe could be able to create herd immunity as a basis for gradually reopening international aviation transport operations at the end of the third quarter or the beginning of the fourth quarter 2021.

The Vietnamese aviation market is expected to recover from the middle of the third quarter of 2021 with a target of serving 70 million passengers at Viet Nam's airports in 2021, Thang said.

In addition, Vietnam Airlines and Vietjet Air have both joined the International Air Traffic Association (IATA)'s Travel Pass, an electronic health passport application. The IATA Travel Pass helps passengers and governments manage travel and medical information.

Specifically, Vietnam Airlines will officially implement a trial of the IATA Travel Pass on two flights numbered VN301 from Narita Airport (Tokyo, Japan) to Da Nang on July 15 and July 23.

Thang said that the biggest difficulty for airlines is financial. To revive the airlines at this period, the Government's support is very important to create conditions for the airlines to have the capital to restore services.

"The Government’s financial support is only to encourage the airlines to maintain operations, the most important thing is still the efforts of the airlines themselves," Thang told the Vietnam News Agency.

The Ministry of Planning and Investment has proposed the Government issue a supportive mechanism with interest rates of about 4 per cent for banking loans in 2021-2023 for the airlines. The loans would help the airlines to maintain operation now and then recover business in the future.

The pandemic situation in the world is still complicated with new outbreaks and new variants of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, while the deployment of vaccination programmes globally has been slower than initially expected.

Due to the impact of the pandemic, the global economy has shown signs of recession and people's incomes are affected, reducing travel demand in the long term, especially by air.

Arrivals to Viet Nam by air are now almost exclusively foreign officials, experts and repatriates, with foreign tourism wiped out.

Therefore, cargo transport still plays an important role in the domestic aviation market.

According to the Civil Aviation Authority of Viet Nam (CAAV), in the first six months of 2021, Viet Nam's airports received 26.8 million passengers, down 19.4 per cent year on year, including 145,000 international passengers (down by 97.9 per cent) and 26.7 million domestic passengers (up by 1.4 per cent).

Those airports also received 668,000 tonnes of cargo, an increase of 12.7 per cent over the same period in 2020, 490,000 tonnes of international cargo (up by 18.1 per cent) and 179,000 tonnes of domestic goods (up by 0.3 per cent).

The CAAV also said Vietnamese airlines companies had used most of their fleets for domestic routes, with the frequency and number of routes skyrocketing.

The number of domestic routes operated by Vietnamese airlines has even hit 62, 10 more than in 2019. — VNS

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