U.S. airports warn of $40 billion impact of COVID-19, seek more government aid
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A group representing major U.S. airports said on Thursday it expected to see a $40 billion impact over two years from the steep decline in passenger traffic because of the coronavirus pandemic, and called for a new round of government assistance.
Airports Council International – North America (ACI-NA) projects U.S. airports will face $17 billion in lost revenue and higher costs between April 2021 and March 2022, in addition to the $23 billion impact in the year ending in March 2021.
In March, airports received $10 billion in emergency assistance from Congress and last month lawmakers approved another $2 billion for airports and airport concessionaires who had sought a second round of $10 billion from Congress.
"The ongoing global pandemic continues to severely impact the finances of U.S. airports," said ACI-NA Chief Executive Kevin M. Burke, adding the new forecast shows airports "will need additional federal assistance to get through this crisis."
Burke said passenger traffic at U.S. airports fell 65% in 2020 and it estimates traffic will be down 40% over pre-pandemic projections.
The Transportation Security Administration said this month it screened 500 million fewer passengers in 2020 versus 2019.
The airport group estimates U.S. airports will see at least 1 billion fewer passengers over the two-year period ending in March 2022.
Airports forecast $11.4 billion in lost airport operating revenue, $3.5 billion for additional operational and infrastructure costs related to COVID-19, and $2.1 billion from lost ticket charges and user fees.
Total outstanding debt for U.S. commercial airports at the end of the 2019 fiscal year was about $107 billion and airports face $16 billion to service that debt for 2020 and 2021,the group said.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Alexandra Hudson)