Dubai Airshow to take place this year under limited capacity

Dubai Airshow to take place this year under limited capacity

DUBAI: The Dubai Airshow organizer said, this year’s aerospace trade show and a spectacle for business deals worth billions of dollars, will be held under capacity restrictions in November due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Even though few deals are expected as the industry seeks to preserve cash, the show is seen as a psychological boost for airlines and plane makers to reset an industry battered by the health crisis.

The Dubai Airshow, scheduled for Nov. 14-18, will be the largest aerospace trade event to be held since the pandemic forced the cancelation of European shows Farnborough and Le Bourget in 2020 and 2021, respectively.

It is a magnet for tens of thousands of visitors including plane makers, their suppliers, airlines, arms firms, and military officials from around the world. Over the years it became a key industry summit as state carriers like host Emirates reshaped international travel through their Gulf hubs.

Timothy Hawes, managing director of organizer Tarsus F&E, said the number of exhibitors who had signed up for this year’s show was so far the same as when it was last held in 2019.

The five-day show in 2019 welcomed over 84,000 visitors and 1,200 exhibitors, according to the organizer.
Exhibition stands are to be spread further apart from each other this year than in previous shows to maintain distancing between attendees, Hawes said.

Stands and the show as a whole will also have limits on how many visitors can be in attendance at any single moment, he said. However, those limits fall within previous attendance levels, wearing of masks is expected to be compulsory.

“We are very much ready to showcase and bring people together again. It’s been a long time of people (not) meeting face-to-face,” Hawes said.

A decision had yet to be made on whether attendance would be limited to those vaccinated against the novel coronavirus or those who had recently tested negative for COVID-19, he said.