Airports clogged with long queues over travel rebound

Bloomberg

Understaffed airports and airlines from Australia to Europe are struggling to cope with a fresh rush of travellers, with long queues and flight disruptions expected to persist as the busy Easter weekend approaches.
The aviation industry axed hundreds of thousands of workers to get through the worst of the Covid-19 pandemic. That left airports and airlines short of staff to handle an upswing in travel as much of the world drops entry restrictions, while the virus continues to ripple through flight crews and ground workers.
Sydney Airport, Australia’s
international gateway, has called the combination of factors a
“perfect storm.”
“We just can’t get staff,” Sydney Airport Chief Executive Officer Geoff Culbert said on Australian television. “It’s going to be like this for a little while.”
Domestic parking is currently full and is forecast to be right through the Easter long weekend.
Culbert said on some days the airport can find itself running at 60% staff capacity while having to process more than 80% of pre-Covid passenger volumes. “The maths leads you to where we are,” he said.
Ahead of the Easter holiday, there’s already nowhere to park at Sydney Airport for those taking a domestic flight.
The rebound in some major markets including the US has caught airlines and airports on the hop. Smaller markets such as Thailand and Singapore that are yet to reopen to the same degree aren’t seeing the same delays.
US airports are “chock-a-block” with travellers, AirAsia Group Bhd founder Tony Fernandes said in an interview. He said a similar recovery in air travel in Asia, where restrictions in places such as China remain, was still a few months away.
UK holidaymakers face lengthy queues. Almost 4.2 million travelers passed through London’s Heathrow Airport in March, a more than sevenfold jump from a year earlier. Border Force staff from Scotland and Northern Ireland are being deployed to help mitigate queues at the airport, which is racing to hire 12,000 new workers after the UK lifted curbs on travel.
Low-cost carrier EasyJet Plc and British Airways Plc both cancelled flights. The same day, one third of EasyJet services were delayed, according to tracking site FlightAware.
JetBlue Airways Corp is planning to reduce its summer schedule to avoid flight disruptions due to staff shortages, CNBC reported.
Qantas has asked unrostered pilots to join three international flights and several domestic services that are critically short of crew, the Sydney Morning Herald reported, citing an internal note from the airline.

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