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Arabian Travel Market Virtual

At The Arabian Travel Market Virtual, Sir Tim Clark, President of Emirates stated that once the vaccine program beats the virus, the demand for air travel could come back at a ‘staggering rate’ by Q4 2021

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Pradeep Chamaria
Pradeep Chamaria
I am a photojournalist. Love to travel to unknown and unexplored vistas. Since 1992, I make places desirable for other travelers through experiential Travel Writing.

DUBAI: Following last week’s in-person Arabian Travel Market the Middle East’s largest travel and tourism showcase, continued this week with the opening of Arabian Travel Market Virtual.

Under the same theme of ‘A new dawn for travel & tourism,’ the three-day event, which is specifically designed for those industry professionals unable to attend the in-person ATM event, kicked off this year with Sir Tim Clark, President of Emirates, who gave a candid outlook about the recovery of the aviation industry.

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During a virtual conversation with top aviation consultant, John Strickland, who conducted the interview from London, Sir Tim initially gave his opinion on the recovery timescale of the aviation sector.

“The ideal situation is that the vaccine program beats the virus by Autumn of this year and we get some relief, then demand will come back at a staggering rate. Low cost (airlines) will benefit from intra-European travel, the US domestic market, China’s domestic market and international travel will (also) return in large numbers,” said Sir Tim.

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“But the problem will be twofold. The ability of airlines to meet the demand when it comes and two, the conditionality of country access requirements,” he added.

On the latter point, Sir Tim explained that even though there is massive pent-up demand, there may well be inhibitors too. Some passengers might be nervous and worried about variant strains of the Coronavirus, the situation in India he said is creating a ripple effect across the global economy.

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Although airlines and airports had really worked hard to ‘sanitise’ how they managed passenger welfare, mitigating risk through their protocols, that alone would not be enough.

“It’s a question of how we navigate the next six months and if we do it right with equitable vaccine distribution, testing regimes simplified and made cheaper, all of this lends to the theory that by the end of the year, we’ll be back in business in some scale,” he said.

Sir Tim then moved on to talk about business travel and said: “Business travel will return in absolute terms, but segments will change. Airlines will have to adapt to the changing nature of demand. An a la carte menu for business class which allows you to pick and choose products at various price points that go with it, is a smart idea.”

When Strickland asked about the longer outlook for aviation, Sir Tim ended on a defiant and positive note. “In the fullness of time it will all go away – it will be history.”

Elsewhere on the program IATA’s Director General Willie Walsh gave a keynote interview, once again with John Strickland and explored the priority issues on Willie Walsh’s agenda, and talked about how IATA needed to drive the engagement and consistency of approach to permit airlines to begin the process of recovery. The Saudi Arabia Tourism Summit also returned virtually to take an exclusive look at the future of Saudi’s hotel landscape. With the long-term tourism outlook more bullish than ever, hotel industry heavyweights including Accor’s TIMEA CEO Mark Willis, Hassan Ahdab, President of Hotels Operations for Dur Hospitality, and Christopher Lund, Director, Head of Hotels, MENA Region, Colliers International, discussed the vast potential for new and innovative hospitality concepts that could keep pace with demand from fast-changing guest demographics.

Read Also: Arabian Travel Mart 2021 – Dubai

Author

  • Pradeep Chamaria

    I am a photojournalist. Love to travel to unknown and unexplored vistas. Since 1992, I make places desirable for other travelers through experiential Travel Writing.

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