Coronavirus UK: Heathrow Airport records £1.5BILLION loss for the first nine months of 2020
Heathrow loses its status as Europe’s busiest airport and suffers £1.5BILLION loss in 2020 as boss says Britain has been ‘too slow’ on passenger testing
- Passenger numbers between July and September were down by more than 84pc
- Heathrow Airport it caused loss of £1.5billion in the first nine months of the year
- Chief executive John Holland-Kaye said passenger testing needed introducing
Heathrow Airport today lost its status as Europe’s busiest airport as it recorded a loss of £1.5billion in the first nine months of the year due to Covid-19.
Passenger numbers between July and September were down by more than 84 per cent compared with the same period in 2019, leading the west London hub to be overtaken by Paris Charles de Gaulle as the busiest in Europe.
Amsterdam Schiphol and Frankfurt are ‘close behind’, Heathrow warned, as chief executive John Holland-Kaye insisted that ‘Britain is falling behind’ because ‘we’ve been too slow to embrace passenger testing’ for Covid-19.
By comparison, coronavirus testing regimes have implemented at all three ‘continental rivals’, the airport said in a statement.
The airport’s third-quarter revenue fell by 72 per cent year on year to £239million, while earnings before tax and interest dropped to £37million.
Heathrow’s ceding of its position as Europe’s busiest airport will be a blow to Britain’s global trading ambitions, just when it most needs connectivity with countries outside of the EU ahead of the end of the Brexit transition period.
Mr Holland-Kaye, a vocal critic of the Government’s Covid-19 strategy, said: ‘Britain is falling behind because we’ve been too slow to embrace passenger testing.
‘European leaders acted quicker and now their economies are reaping the benefits.
Heathrow has reported a £1.5 billion loss due to restrictions brought on by the pandemic
John Holland-Kaye, chief executive officer of Heathrow Airport, urged passenger testing
‘Paris has overtaken Heathrow as Europe’s largest airport for the first time ever, and Frankfurt and Amsterdam are quickly gaining ground.
‘Let’s make Britain a winner again. Bringing in pre-departure Covid tests and partnering with our US allies to open a pilot air bridge to America will kickstart our economic recovery and put the UK back ahead of our European rivals.’
Earlier this month, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps launched a taskforce to develop methods of reducing the 14-day self-isolation period for people arriving in the UK from non-exempt locations.
He said the Government is considering a ‘test and release regime’ which would still involve a quarantine period of at least a week.
In a statement released today Heathrow also slashed the outlook for next year’s passenger numbers as the pandemic continues to crush demand for flying.
The airport said it now expected 37 million people to travel through the airport in 2021, lowering an earlier forecast made in June by 41 per cent when it guided that 63 million passengers would use it.
Britain has said it will bring in airport testing by the beginning of December, but Mr Holland-Kaye said it should go further and agree a deal to allow travel between Heathrow and the US.
‘Bringing in pre-departure COVID tests and partnering with our US allies to open a pilot airbridge to America will kickstart our economic recovery and put the UK back ahead of our European rivals,’ he said in a statement.
Tightening travel restrictions this autumn have hit airlines and airports, ruining hopes for a recovery.
Heathrow said its finances ‘remain robust’, with £4.5billion of liquidity, and it had sufficient cash reserves for the next 12 months even if travel stopped completely, despite the crushing blow to its business inflicted by Covid-19 restrictions.
The airport is owned by Spain’s Ferrovial, the Qatar Investment Authority and China Investment Corp among others.
Industry body ACI Europe warned yesterday that nearly 200 airports across the continent face insolvency in the coming months unless demand for air travel starts to recover by the end of the year.
Airports Council International Europe said 193 out of 740 airports in the region will soon struggle to find enough money to carry on.
Director General Olivier Jankovec said: ‘The figures published today paint a dramatically bleak picture.
‘Eight months into the crisis all of Europe’s airports are burning through cash to remain open, with revenues far from covering the costs of operations.
‘In the midst of a second wave, ensuring safe air travel continues to be our primary concern. It’s crucial that we reduce the risks of importation and dissemination as much as possible. But surely we can do a much better job of reducing those risks by testing air passengers rather than with quarantines that cannot be enforced.’