A worse start to 2021 than anticipated and continuing international travel restrictions have prompted IATA to forecast that the world’s airlines will continue to “burn cash” until next year, leading the association’s executive director general to warn that governments must “open their borders or their wallets” to keep the sector viable, and that the time is now to plan for a restart to travel.
The International Air Transport Association says that new analysis shows that the airline industry is expected to remain cash negative throughout 2021, whereas previous analysis (November 2020) indicated that airlines would turn cash positive in the fourth quarter of 2021. At the industry level, airlines are now not expected to be cash positive until 2022, says IATA.
Estimates for cash burn in 2021 have ballooned to the US$75 billion to $95 billion range from a previously anticipated $48 billion.
The following factors play into this estimate, says IATA:
• Weak Start for 2021: It is already clear that the first half of 2021 will be worse than earlier anticipated as a result of tightened travel restrictions by governments in response to new COVID-19 variants. Forward bookings for summer (July-August) are currently 78 percent below levels in February 2019 (comparisons to 2020 are distorted owing to COVID-19 impacts).
• Optimistic scenario: From this lower starting point for the year, an optimistic scenario would see travel restrictions gradually lifted once the vulnerable populations in developed economies have been vaccinated, but only in time to facilitate tepid demand over the peak summer travel season in the northern hemisphere. In this case 2021 demand would be 38 percent of 2019 levels. Airlines would burn through $75 billion of cash over the year. But cash burn of $7 billion in the fourth quarter would be significantly improved from an anticipated $33 billion cash burn in the first quarter.
• Pessimistic scenario: This scenario would see airlines burn through $95 billion over the year. There would be an improving trend from a $33 billion cash burn in the first quarter reducing to $16 billion in the fourth quarter. The driver of this scenario would be governments retaining significant travel restrictions through the peak northern summer travel season. In this case, 2021 demand would only be 33% of 2019 levels.
“With governments having tightening border restrictions, 2021 is shaping up to be a much tougher year than previously expected. Our best-case scenario sees airlines burning through $75 billion in cash this year, and it could be as bad as $95 billion,” says IATA Director General and CEO Alexandre de Juniac.
He adds, “More emergency relief from governments will be needed. A functioning airline industry can eventually energize the economic recovery from COVID-19, but that won’t happen if there are massive failures before the crisis ends. If governments are unable to open their borders, we will need them to open their wallets with financial relief to keep airlines viable.”
With airlines now expected to burn cash throughout 2021, IATA says it is vital that governments and the industry are fully prepared to restart the moment governments agree that it is safe to re-open borders.
To that end, IATA says three initiatives are critical:
• Planning: Preparing the industry to safely restart after a year or more of disruption will take careful planning and months of preparation. Governments can ensure that airlines are prepared to reconnect people and economies by working with industry to develop the benchmarks and plans that would enable an orderly and timely restart.
“The UK has set a good example,” says de Juniac. “(Last) week it laid out a structure for re-opening based on an improvement in the COVID-19 situation. This gives airlines a framework to plan the restart, even if it needs to be adjusted along the way. Other governments should take note as a best practice for working with industry.”
• Health credentials: It is becoming clear that vaccines and testing will play a role as the pandemic comes under control and economies ramp up, including the travel sector. The IATA Travel Pass will enable travellers to securely control their health data and share it with relevant authorities. A growing list of airlines – including Air New Zealand, Copa Airlines, Etihad Airways, Emirates, Qatar Airways, Malaysia Airlines, RwandAir, and Singapore Airlines – have done or are committed to doing trials with IATA Travel Pass.
Says de Juniac: “Efficient digital management of health credentials is vital to restart. Manual processes will not be able to cope with volumes once the recovery begins. Digital solutions must be secure, work with existing systems, align with global standards and respect data privacy. In developing the IATA Travel Pass these are fully in focus (and) help to set the bar very high for managing health credentials, protecting against fraud and enabling a convenient travel process…”
• Global standards: As vaccination programs and testing capacity expand, two developments have become critical – global standards to record tests and vaccines; and a plan to retrospectively record those who have already been vaccinated.
“Speed is critical. Fraudulent COVID-19 test results are already proving to be an issue,” the IATA boss says. “And as vaccine programs ramp up, governments are using paper processes and differing digital standards to record who has been vaccinated. These are not the conditions needed to support a successful restart at scale when governments open borders. The WHO, ICAO, and OECD are working on standards, but each day without them means the challenge gets bigger. We need an early conclusion by competent authorities that the industry can plan around.”
Juniac concludes: “Even as governments focus on managing the COVID-19 crisis, we must be thinking a step ahead to the plans, tools and standards needed to restart flying and energize the economic recovery from COVID-19… With good news on vaccines and growing testing capacity, there is a glimmer of light at the end of the tunnel. So, it’s the time to ask governments for their restart plan and to offer any support from industry that could help.”