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Etihad Airways expects strong travel demand in second half of 2021 Etihad Airways expects strong travel demand in second half of 2021

Etihad Airways expects travel demand to improve in the second half of 2021 as border restrictions are eased and more people are vaccinated, stoking hopes for a summer travel rebound. There is a "very strong intake" on forward bookings for passenger flights to Seychelles, Moscow and Casablanca that are resuming at the end of March, and for its new route to Tel Aviv that starts on April 6, said senior vice president for global sales and cargo Martin Drew on Sunday.

The airline also pointed to "strong demand" on some routes such as Pakistan and Bangladesh as people travel to visit family and friends. Mr Drew said pent-up demand is expected to drive a strong rebound as vaccination campaigns become more widespread and travel restrictions are eased. The briefing comes a year after the UAE suspended most passenger flights on March 23 to curb the spread of the Covid-19 virus.

The impact of the pandemic on the global aviation industry was catastrophic and dwarfed that of 9/11, Sars and the global financial crisis. The International Air Transport Association, which represents airlines around the world, has called for quarantines to be replaced by Covid-19 tests and vaccines to enable a safe travel restart. The organisation is touting its Travel Pass health app as one solution.

Etihad plans to test the Travel Pass on its North American routes in April, said Chris Youlten, executive director of operations strategy. It serves four destinations in the region – Toronto, Chicago, New York and Washington. The airline has been trialling several digital health apps by various developers on its European and Pakistan routes.

"It is a 'watch this space' at the moment. The intention is to make travel easy," said Mr Youlten. The apps will not be the reason travel opens up but they will enable it "once governments decide on what regulations are put in place to cross their borders in either direction", he said. "It is just one part of a complex puzzle at the reopening that we hope will come in the next few quarters."

A lack of common global standards on the application or lifting of travel restrictions has complicated the industry's recovery after the pandemic. "We anticipate that in the second half of the year things will start to improve and once they do improve, then the need for us to be able to validate and verify through a travel pass is going to be more and more essential," said Mr Youlten.

Etihad said it does not require passengers to be vaccinated, referring to an industry debate on conditions for international travel."I think it will be a very difficult situation for any government to discriminate on the basis of vaccination only because we do know that there will be a portion of society that cannot vaccinate for other medical conditions," he said. "It will certainly enable travel but it will not bar those that are not vaccinated from travelling."

Source: The National