Britain says No Exact date on U.S. travel Reopening

London Heathrow Airport’s COVID losses balloon to $3.4 bln

(Reuter) Heathrow, Britain’s biggest airport, mentioned on Thursday a first-quarter loss of 329 million pounds ($459 million) took total losses since the beginning of the pandemic to nearly 2.4 billion pounds as travel continues to be hammered.

It mentioned only 1.7 million passengers traveled through the London airport within the three months to March 31, down 91% compared to the first quarter of 2019.

Heathrow, which through the pandemic lost its crown as Europe’s busiest hub to Paris, mentioned continuing uncertainty over British government policy meant it had reduced its passenger forecast for the yr to a range of between 13 million and 36 million, compared to 81 million in 2019.

Britain’s aviation industry is hoping that flying will rebound in late May once COVID-19 restrictions are eased, but uncertainty remains about where individuals will be able to go, and how digital vaccine passports will work.

British transport secretary Grant Shapps has mentioned he’ll chair a meeting of G7 transport ministers next week to discuss vaccine passports before saying which nations would be open to Britons for travel in early May.

Heathrow reiterated that Britain’s summer economic recovery depended on travel restarting from May 17.

It mentioned it would be ready to scale up operations as demand returned however repeated concerns about the UK Border Force’s ability to prevent a long wait for arriving passengers at passport checks.

“Ministers will need to ensure every desk is staffed to avoid unacceptable queues,” it mentioned.

Britain’s aviation regulator mentioned on Tuesday that Heathrow could charge airlines 30 pence more per passenger to assist recover up to 3 billion pounds of pandemic losses, a fraction of what Heathrow had asked for but enough to infuriate the owner of British Airways.

Heathrow is owned by investors including Spain’s Ferrovial (FER.MC) the Qatar Investment Authority and China Investment Corp.