Europe Newspapers
  • Home
  • United Kingdom
  • Germany
  • France
  • Spain
  • Italy
  • Austria
  • Belgium
  • Denmark
  • Finland
  • Greece
  • Netherlands
  • More
    • Norway
    • Portugal
    • Sweden
    • Switzerland
    • Turkey
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • United Kingdom
  • Germany
  • France
  • Spain
  • Italy
  • Austria
  • Belgium
  • Denmark
  • Finland
  • Greece
  • Netherlands
  • More
    • Norway
    • Portugal
    • Sweden
    • Switzerland
    • Turkey
No Result
View All Result
Europe Newspapers
No Result
View All Result
Home Travel

Summer travel at risk as Europe’s airports face mass staff shortages

by europepapers
June 23, 2022
in Travel
306 13
A A
0
175
SHARES
1.6k
VIEWS
FacebookTwitter

After 21 years as a service agent at Air France, Karim Djeffal left his job during the COVID pandemic to start his own coaching consultancy.

“If this doesn’t work out, I won’t be going back to the aviation sector,” says the 41-year-old bluntly. “Some shifts started at 4am and others ended at midnight. It could be exhausting.”

Djeffal offers a taste of what airports and airlines across Europe are up against as they race to hire thousands to cope with resurgent demand, dubbed “revenge travel” as people seek to make up for vacations lost during the pandemic.

Airports in Germany, France, Spain and the Netherlands have tried offering perks including pay rises and bonuses for workers who refer a friend.

Leading operators have already flagged thousands of openings across Europe.

Yet the hiring blitz can’t come fast enough to erase the risk of cancelled flights and long waits for travellers even beyond the summer peak, analysts and industry officials say.

The summer when air travel was supposed to return to normal after a two-year pandemic vacuum is in danger of becoming the summer when the high-volume, low-cost air travel model broke down – at least in Europe’s sprawling integrated market.

Labour shortages and strikes have already caused disruption in London, Amsterdam, Paris, Rome and Frankfurt this spring.

Airlines such as low-cost giant easyJet are cancelling hundreds of summer flights and new strikes are brewing in Belgium, Spain, France and Scandinavia.

On Monday the British carrier said it was cutting even more services in the busy summer period to help manage problems including ground staff shortages and flight caps at London Gatwick and Amsterdam.

As industry leaders hold their annual summit in Qatar this week, a major theme will be who bears responsibility for the chaos between airlines, airports and governments.

“There is a lot of mud-slinging, but every side is at fault in not coping with the resurgence of demand,” said James Halstead, managing partner at consultancy Aviation Strategy.

Aviation lost 2.3 million jobs globally during the pandemic, with ground-handling and security hardest hit, according to industry lobby group the Air Transport Action Group. Many workers are slow to return, lured by the ‘gig’ economy or opting to retire early.

“They clearly have alternatives now and can switch jobs,” said senior ING economist Rico Luman.

While he expects travel pressure will ease after the summer, he says shortages may persist as older workers stay away and, critically, fewer younger workers are willing to replace them.

“Even if there is a recession, the labour market will remain tight at least this year,” he said.

Is low morale a problem for aviation staff?

A major factor slowing hiring is the time it takes new workers to get security clearance – in France, up to five months for the most sensitive jobs, according to the CFDT union.

Marie Marivel, 56, works as a security operator screening luggage at CDG for around 1,800 euros a month post-tax.

She says shortages have led to staff being overworked. Stranded passengers have been turning aggressive. Morale is low.

“We have young people who come and leave again after a day,” she says. “They tell us we’re earning cashiers’ wages for a job with so much responsibility.”

After much disruption in May, the situation in France is stabilising, said Anne Rigail, chief executive of the French arm of Air France-KLM.

Even so, Paris’s Charles de Gaulle and Orly airports, where one union has called a strike on 2 July, still need to fill a total of 4,000 vacancies, according to the operator.

And in the Netherlands, where unemployment is much lower at 3.3 per cent, unfilled vacancies are at record highs and KLM’s Schiphol hub has seen hundreds of cancelled flights and long queues.

Schiphol has now given a summer bonus of 5.25 euros per hour to 15,000 workers in security, baggage handling, transportation and cleaning – a 50 per cent increase for those on minimum wage.

“That’s of course huge, but it still isn’t enough,” said Joost van Doesburg of union FNV.

“Let’s be honest, the last six weeks have not really been an advertisement for coming to work at the airport.”

Schiphol and London’s Gatwick last week unveiled plans to cap capacity during the summer, forcing more cancellations as airlines, airports and politicians bicker over the crisis.

It’s become a blame game

Luis Felipe de Oliveira, head of global airports association ACI, told Reuters airports are being unfairly blamed and airlines should work harder to address queues and rising costs.

Willie Walsh, head of the International Air Transport Association, the global airline industry group meeting in Qatar, has dismissed talk of a breakdown in air travel as “hysteria”.

“It has been bad for some consumers, and clearly airlines and airports want to apologise for that,” he told Reuters.

“But we need to put it into context; it’s not at every airport…I haven’t witnessed the horror stories I read about in the press,” he said on the sidelines of his group’s annual meeting in Doha.

Walsh has already blamed part of the disruption on the actions of “idiot politicians” in places like Britain where frequent changes in COVID policy discouraged hiring.

The June 19-21 IATA meeting signals relative optimism about growth tempered by concerns over inflation.

Such gatherings have for years portrayed the industry as the positive face of globalisation, connecting people and goods at ever more competitive fares.

But the European labour crisis has exposed its vulnerability to a fragile labour force, with the resulting rise in costs likely to push fares higher and add pressure for restructuring.

In Germany, for example, employers say many ground workers have joined online retailers such as Amazon.

“It’s more comfortable packing a hair dryer or a computer in a box than heaving a 50-pound suitcase crawling into the fuselage of an airplane,” said Thomas Richter, chief of the German ground-handling employers’ association ABL.

Analysts say the labour squeeze may raise costs beyond the summer, but it is too early to tell whether the industry must step back from the pre-pandemic model of ever-rising volumes and cost-cutting, which generated new routes and kept fares low.

For some departing employees, however, Europe’s torrid summer signals a wake-up call for passengers and bosses alike.

“I personally think the very cheap flying…I just don’t know how they can really keep up with that,” said a former British Airways cabin crew member, 58, who has taken redundancy.

Source: Euro News

Tags: AirlinesAirportinternational traveljob lossStrikeTravel

Related Posts

Travel

How Italy plans to tackle overcrowding this summer

July 4, 2022
Travel

Why travel to Central America is so hot for 2022

July 4, 2022
Travel

Venice entry fee: When and how you need to book

July 4, 2022
Travel

How Türkiye is moving towards a more sustainable future

July 4, 2022
Travel

How are cruises evolving to try and be less environmentally harmful?

July 3, 2022
Travel

This tiny Himalayan eco-nation is finally reopening to tourists

July 2, 2022

Recommended

NHS ‘deliberately tried to cover-up failures when newborn baby died’

9 months ago

Only 127 people have applied for Christmas lorry driver visas so far

9 months ago

NHS staff crisis ‘within days if key workers are denied priority access to fuel’

9 months ago

Torrential downpours leave parts of London flooded overnight

9 months ago

Recent News

Antikainen: Vihervasemmiston yritys estää itärajan sulkeminen tarvittaessa pelaa Kremlin pussiin

July 5, 2022

Saksan energiakriisi pahenemassa – Teollisuus pelkää, että Venäjä toteuttaa uhkauksensa

July 5, 2022

Κορωνοϊός: Εκτοξεύθηκαν στις 25.566 τα νέα κρούσματα – 19 θάνατοι και 98 διασωληνωμένοι

July 5, 2022

Πύρινα μέτωπα σε όλη τη χώρα: Ανεξέλεγκτη πυρκαγιά στο Πόρτο Γερμενό – Δύσκολη κατάσταση σε Κόρινθο και Άραξο

July 5, 2022

Politiet styrker bemanningen på VG-lista i Trondheim

July 5, 2022

Livraria Lello leva a leilão coleção assinada de Harry Potter

July 5, 2022

Så ser läget ut för Liberalerna inför valet

July 5, 2022

Nödtillstånd efter extrem torka i Italiens kornbod

July 5, 2022
No Result
View All Result

Highlights

Πύρινα μέτωπα σε όλη τη χώρα: Ανεξέλεγκτη πυρκαγιά στο Πόρτο Γερμενό – Δύσκολη κατάσταση σε Κόρινθο και Άραξο

Politiet styrker bemanningen på VG-lista i Trondheim

Livraria Lello leva a leilão coleção assinada de Harry Potter

Så ser läget ut för Liberalerna inför valet

Nödtillstånd efter extrem torka i Italiens kornbod

Jetzt Fragen beantworten, tippen und gewinnen

Trending

Greece

Πύρινα μέτωπα σε όλη τη χώρα: Ανεξέλεγκτη πυρκαγιά στο Πόρτο Γερμενό – Δύσκολη κατάσταση σε Κόρινθο και Άραξο

by europepapers
July 5, 2022
0

Σε εξέλιξη βρίσκονται μεγάλα πύρινα μέτωπα σε όλη τη χώρα με μεγαλύτερη τη φωτιά στο Πόρτο Γερμενό,...

Politiet styrker bemanningen på VG-lista i Trondheim

July 5, 2022

Livraria Lello leva a leilão coleção assinada de Harry Potter

July 5, 2022

Så ser läget ut för Liberalerna inför valet

July 5, 2022

Nödtillstånd efter extrem torka i Italiens kornbod

July 5, 2022
Europe Newspapers

Europe newspapers is the biggest news portal in Europe and the first to provide all the news from all the newspapers in Europe.

Follow us on social media:

Recent News

  • Antikainen: Vihervasemmiston yritys estää itärajan sulkeminen tarvittaessa pelaa Kremlin pussiin
  • Saksan energiakriisi pahenemassa – Teollisuus pelkää, että Venäjä toteuttaa uhkauksensa
  • Κορωνοϊός: Εκτοξεύθηκαν στις 25.566 τα νέα κρούσματα – 19 θάνατοι και 98 διασωληνωμένοι

Topics

abd Angriff auf die Ukraine cataluna cnn ΕΙΔΗΣΕΙΣ Coronavirus COVID-19 cultura desporto economia espana fama futebol Fußball internacional International istanbul Justicia madrid mundo nacional noticias pais Pedro Sánchez politica Politik PP PSOE Roma Russia Russia-Ukraine invasion Russland Rusya tecnologia Ukraine Ukrayna Unterhaltung USA Vox Wirtschaft ΕΙΔΗΣΕΙΣ ΕΙΔΗΣΕΙΣ ΤΩΡΑ ΕΛΛΑΔΑ ΕΟΔΥ ΚΟΡΩΝΟΪΟΣ ΚΟΡΩΝΟΪΟΣ ΣΤΗΝ ΕΛΛΑΔΑ

Sign Up For Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our mailing list to receives daily updates direct to your inbox!

  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact
  • Advertise

© 2021 Europe Newspapers - Developed by Sawah Web.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • United Kingdom
  • Germany
  • France
  • Spain
  • Italy
  • Austria
  • Belgium
  • Denmark
  • Finland
  • Greece
  • Netherlands
  • Norway
  • Portugal
  • Sweden
  • Switzerland
  • Turkey

© 2021 Europe Newspapers - Developed by Sawah Web.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In