RNS Number : 3587B
11.02.2022
Year off to slow start as travel restrictions flatten confidence and demand
· Demand to travel in January was weaker than expected and over 56% down versus pre-pandemic levels as the hangover from Omicron continued to suppress passenger confidence. Over 1.3 million passengers cancelled or did not book their trips because of Omicron restrictions in December and January
· While bookings for outbound tourism are recovering, inbound tourism and business travel remain weak due to COVID-19 levels in the UK and other countries, international testing requirements and the risk of new border closures in the event of a new variant of concern. We urge the Government to support the sustainable recovery of travel and trade by outlining a playbook for managing future variants and seeking international harmonisation of travel rules
· We are maintaining our forecast for the year at just over half of pre-pandemic levels on the basis that strong demand for outbound summer holidays can offset a weaker start to the year, and are working with airlines and ground handlers to increase resources across the airport ahead of the summer peak
· We continue working with the CAA on a better regulatory outcome for consumers by correcting the factual errors in its initial proposals and designing effective mechanisms to enable the fastest possible traffic recovery
· We are building on our leadership role with the launch of our updated sustainability strategy Heathrow 2.0: Connecting People and Planet which sets out ambitious plans to reduce fossil fuel carbon from aviation and to make Heathrow a great place to live and work
Heathrow CEO John Holland-Kaye said:
"After a tough Christmas, Omicron has continued to bite and this has been a weak start to the year. As short-lived as the additional travel restrictions were, they ruined the travel plans of more than 1.3 million passengers in the last two months.
"Today's removal of restrictions for vaccinated passengers in and out of the UK offers a ray of hope, but the Omicron hangover proves demand remains fragile, and at risk to new variants of concern and Government needs to set out a playbook for managing future variants that allows travel and trade to keep flowing."
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