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London’s Heathrow Passenger Numbers Fell to 1972 Levels Last Year

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    We’d love to see airports such as Heathrow reassess their growth plans following the pandemic, but few of them have done much more than dream up new fees for passengers and airlines during these last two years.

    London’s Heathrow said passenger numbers fell to 19.4 million last year, the lowest since 1972, as it was hit by COVID-19 travel restrictions.

    Britain’s biggest airport, which recorded a pretax loss of 1.79 billion pounds ($2.43 billion) for 2021, said on Wednesday that passenger numbers were currently 23% behind forecast but it expected a strong summer for outbound tourism.

    It said it expected to meet its target of 45.5 million passengers this year.

    “Demand is now starting to recover and we are working closely with airlines to scale-up our operations and reopen Terminal 4 for the summer travel peak,” said Chief Executive John Holland-Kaye.

    Heathrow said that while demand for outbound tourism had been boosted by the removal of restrictions in Britain, inbound tourism and business travel remained suppressed because of testing in other countries.

    It said it did not expect travel to return to pre-pandemic levels until all restrictions had been removed and passengers were confident they would not be reimposed.

    ($1 = 0.7359 pounds) (Reporting by Paul Sandle; editing by James Davey)

    This article was from Reuters and was legally licensed through the Industry Dive Content Marketplace. Please direct all licensing questions to legal@industrydive.com.

    Photo Credit: Passengers at Heathrow Airport Terminal 2 departures.
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