Dette er USA, men relevante spørsmål stilles. Nå er det per i går
innført færre seter i fly i Norge, men det sies ikke noe om fly med 2+2 eller 2+3 seter.
(Red.)
Sjekk short notes her: Du vil kunne lese litt om IATAs tiltak også. https://tinyurl.com/y9cbmjg4
Sjekk short notes her: Du vil kunne lese litt om IATAs tiltak også. https://tinyurl.com/y9cbmjg4
How Can Viral Transfer Among Airline Passengers Be Reduced?
Credit: James D. Morgan/Getty Images
Ask the Editors: The Aviation Week Network invites our readers to submit questions to
our editors and analysts. We’ll answer them, and if we can’t we’ll reach out to
our wide network of experts for advice.
Assuming a
COVID-19 immunization will not be achieved in less than 18 months and its
worldwide distribution will take a year, how are we going to reduce the ability
of viral transfer among the airline passengers while in flight?
Air
Transport World Editor-in-Chief Karen Walker responds:
There are no
clear answers and no new regulations yet for the conditions on which mass air
transport can resume. What’s being discussed is how to separate people in
airports—at check in, through immigration, in lounges, at the gates and through
boarding—and avoid crowds while still holding to schedules. This will be easier
while load factors are very low, but it will become more challenging if the
rules stay in place as flights get more full.
Onboard, the
discussion is around things like passenger separation. Keep middle seats free?
Look at alternative cabin designs? Do crew and passengers need to wear masks
and gloves all the time? How can contact be minimized between passengers and
crew? Should food and beverages still be served and, if so, do they need to be
individually sealed prior to takeoff? What sanitizers/disinfectants should be
used and how often? How will this all affect turnaround times?
For
immigration processes, it’s even trickier. Do you screen passengers before they
depart, on arrival or both? Will passports require an electronic proof of the
passenger being COVID-19-tested and negative?
What the
airline industry hopes is that new rules will be harmonized globally so they
are uniform and airlines and passengers know what to expect. Airlines also hope
they will not have to bear the costs of any new regulations, as they are
already in dire financial circumstances, so the cost of new hygiene and
sanitization standards may be added to ticket prices in the form of a fee,
rather like the security fees added to tickets after the 9/11 attacks.
I suspect
some clarification of new rules will emerge in May.
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