Tuesday, 8 December 2020

Guterres spotlights ‘critical role’ of aviation in pandemic recovery, marking International Day

 


Guterres spotlights ‘critical role’ of aviation in pandemic recovery, marking International Day

The World Bank/Arne Hoel
An aircraft being serviced at an airport in Ghana.
    
7 December 2020

The UN Secretary-General has called for greater support for the aviation sector, badly hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, to allow it to better weather the global economic crisis sparked by the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“Aviation is an important engine of our world, and will play a critical role in lifting the world to recovery from COVID-19.  Let us ensure it receives the support it needs to keep the world’s nations connected and united,” Secretary-General António Guterres said in a message commemorating Monday’s International Civil Aviation Day

Aviation is an important engine of our world, and will play a critical role in lifting the world to recovery from COVID-19
 – Secretary-General António Guterres

The sector has been hit hard by the coronavirus, which has disrupted travel, the transportation industry overall, and operations of airlines and airports globally.  

According to the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), a specialized UN agency, passenger seat capacity is down about 51 per cent, entailing staggering economic losses of around $390 billion this year. 

In response, countries must “act urgently” to sustain their air transport sectors from the challenges thrown up by the pandemic, said the Secretary-General. 

He stressed that such actions must keep the battle against climate change in mind. 

Opportunity for climate action  

“Recovery from the pandemic is simultaneously an opportunity for climate action, including to make global aviation more resilient and sustainable as a key part of efforts to reach the goals of the Paris Agreement on Climate Change,” said Mr. Guterres. 

The UN chief also welcomed recent announcements by members of the aviation community to net-zero emissions, and called on the entire sector to commit to net zero by 2050 as well as to develop a strategy aligned with the Paris Agreement.   

Cooperation between governments and the industry will be essential to achieve a timely transition, he added. 

Mr. Guterres also emphasized the role played by international aviation in everyday lives, allowing people to discover the world and its cultures, connecting societies through travel and trade, and advancing access to food, education and healthcare. 

“These benefits are critical to every country’s attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs),” Mr. Guterres said. 

UN News/Vibhu Mishra
Passengers try to find their flight in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport. Several flights have been cancelled as countries closed their borders to contain the spread of COVID-19.

Innovation for aviation 

Salvatore Sciacchitano, President of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) Councilsaid that innovation will play a key role in the aviation sector’s recovery strategies. 

“Looking forward to a post-pandemic world, innovation will be at the very heart of the new era in aviation which is now dawning,” Mr. Sciacchitano said, noting advances such as in autonomous aircraft, renewable power, artificial intelligence, big data, blockchain technology and “many other exciting developments which are changing the face of flight as we know it.”  

Success in these efforts, he underlined, relies on worldwide commitment to the standardization, harmonization, and cooperation which countries and industry achieve together, as part of ICAO. 

“These duties and capabilities are more important than ever today, as we confront together the dual challenges of controlling COVID-19, and mitigating the incredibly severe socio-economic effects it has led to by restricting air connectivity for both developed and developing societies.” 

The International Day 

International Civil Aviation Day, observed on 7 December every year, was established by the UN General Assembly in 1996, recognizing the importance of international civil aviation to sustainable development.   

The date also marks the anniversary of the 1944 signing of the Convention on International Civil Aviation, in Chicago, the United States. 

 

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