Empty middle seat? Depends on which country you are
flying in
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[May 19, 2020] By
Jamie Freed, Stella Qiu and Anne Kauranen
SYDNEY/BEIJING/HELSINKI (Reuters) - In
Thailand, you cannot have food or water in flight and must wear a mask.
In Malaysia and Indonesia, the plane needs to be half-empty. In the
United States and Europe, it's not mandatory for airlines to leave the
middle seat open.
Measures to stem the spread of coronavirus have changed how people
travel, as Beijing resident Feng Xueli, 26, found when she took a
domestic flight this month. The aircraft was full - allowed under the
Chinese rules.
"We needed to wear a mask during the flight and there were PA
announcements basically asking for our cooperation with these anti-virus
measures put in place, which made me a bit nervous," Feng said. "You
also need to go through a lot of temperature checks and security checks
when you leave the airport."
Travellers, airlines and airports are grappling with a hodgepodge of
rules put in place during the pandemic that will make flying different
in almost every country.
"When flying restarts, you are already working against the clock. There
is still a latent fear of travel," said Subhas Menon, head of the
Association of Asia Pacific Airlines. "It's not going to be such a
smooth passage when you travel because of all of the measures that are
going to be introduced."
A little more than a year after uneven national responses to the
grounding of the Boeing <BA.N> 737 MAX, the industry is once again
facing piecemeal regulation.
The last trigger for such widespread changes in the way airlines operate
was the 2001 attacks in the United States, which ushered in new security
measures.
"People globally have understood the security requirements that came
after 9/11. We would like to see that kind of standardisation of
protocols," said Boeing vice-president Mike Delaney, leader of Boeing's
Confident Travel Initiative.
Onboard service is changing too. Business-class meals, once a selling
point for premium carriers hiring celebrity chefs, have been reduced to
pre-packaged items on carriers including Emirates, Air Canada <AC.TO>
and British Airways.
Automation is also increasing, as carriers such as Qantas Airways Ltd <QAN.AX>
ask passengers to check in online to limit contact with staff and other
fliers.
"More than ever, the industry will work towards the vision of an
entirely mobile-enabled journey," said Sumesh Patel of technology
provider SITA, which hopes to benefit from the trend.
[to top of second column] |
Rows of empty seats of
an American Airline flight are seen, as coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) disruption continues across the global industry, during a
flight between Washington D.C. and Miami, in Washington, U.S., March
18, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
EMPTY MIDDLE SEAT?
On the airplane, one of the biggest debates has been over whether middle seats
should be empty.
That would limit airplanes to two-thirds of their normal capacity, not enough
for most airlines to make a profit without increasing fares.
Afif Zakwan, 20, recently took a Malaysia Airlines domestic flight that was
exempt from the requirement to fly half-empty.
He said he was comfortable being on a full domestic flight, but would not
consider flying internationally for now.
"As more and more people travel for whatever reason, confidence and the power of
word of mouth experiences will shape the... recovery," said Mayur Patel of data
firm OAG Aviation.
An official at the Japan Civil Aviation Bureau said the issue of an open middle
seat, which could create unfair advantages if applied unevenly, was
"controversial".
"It's crucial that countries where flights depart coordinate their responses
with countries where they arrive," said the official, who was not authorised to
speak publicly.
Despite the call for common standards, some nations are applying their rules
just to airlines registered in their country, while others are applying them to
foreign carriers.
U.S. carriers are among those requiring passengers and crew to wear facial
coverings, and have also endorsed temperature checks.
In Europe, airlines are largely resisting calls to leave the middle seat empty
but have publicised other changes designed to reassure passengers.
"You have to remember an aircraft is not the natural place to do
social-distancing, so you need to mitigate the health risks by other means, and
facial masks are a good example of those means," Finnair Plc <FIA1S.HE> Chief
Executive Topi Manner told Reuters.
(Reporting by Jamie Freed in Sydney, Stella Qiu in Beijing and Anne Kauranen in
Helsinki; additional reporting by Tim Hepher and Laurence Frost in Paris, Tracy
Rucinski in Chicago, Liz Lee in Kuala Lumpur, Tim Kelly in Tokyo, Chayut
Setboonsarng in Bangkok and Bernadette Christina Munthe in Jakarta; writing by
Jamie Freed. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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