The eighth annual SITA Baggage Report shows that
99.1% of checked baggage was delivered on time to passengers
during 2011.
This is the highest rate of successful delivery since
the report was first produced and represents a saving of US$650
million to the air transport industry over 2010.
Any mishandled bag – checked baggage that has
been delayed, damaged, pilfered, lost or stolen – is a concern for
both passengers and airlines but significant improvements have
been made by the industry in recent years. SITA’s report shows
that the mishandled rate has more than halved since 2007, down
52.4% from 18.88 bags per thousand passengers in 2007 to 8.99 bags
per thousand last year.
“This is great news for the industry. Significantly
improving the handling of baggage to over 99% has saved airlines
US$650 million while also providing better service to passengers.
During 2011, even though we saw a rise in the number of passengers
travelling to 2.87 billion passengers, the industry achieved a
reduction in mishandled bags to 25.8 million. This is 6.5 million
fewer bags mishandled than 2010’s figure of 32.3 million,” said Francesco Violante,
CEO SITA. “Of course, 2011 was less challenging than 2010 when
adverse weather and volcanic ash clouds caused major disruption
but the fact that the industry has halved the mishandled rate over
the past five years is an enormous achievement which has benefited
millions of passengers and directly delivered improvements to
airline earnings. These results are due to concerted efforts by
airlines, airports and ground handlers through the IATA Baggage
Improvement Program; increased focus on standards and best
practices by the Airports Council International; and the
implementation of sophisticated baggage management solutions such
as SITA BagManager.”
SITA is the IT provider for
the air transport industry and operates WorldTracer, the global
system that helps airlines track down mishandled luggage. Used by
more than 450 airlines and ground handlers, WorldTracer collates
reports of missing bags and delivers updated information on actual
locations from more than 100 airports around the world. During
2011, WorldTracer recorded 8.99 mishandled bags per thousand
passengers, down from 12.07 in 2010.
Despite the
great strides made by the air transport industry to improve
mishandling over the last few years, the main – and growing –
contributor to the problem is ‘transfer bags’. Typically, these
bags go astray when passengers and their luggage are moving from
one aircraft to another, and often from one carrier to another, en
route to their final destination. Regardless of the type of
journey, mishandled baggage is an inconvenience for the passenger
and an unwelcome cost for the airlines. In total, transfer bags
account for 53% of all delayed luggage and costs the industry at
least $1.36 billion per annum.
Violante said, “Our
report highlights various initiatives to address the transfer bag
problem and if the industry is able to focus on improving the
transfer bag performance, the savings in penalty costs for
airlines and the passenger experience could improve even faster.
SITA will continue to work with the community to ensure that the
best processes and technologies are used to conquer this
challenge.”
Over the past year when the overall
mishandling rate dropped, the number of bags actually lost or
stolen also plummeted by 45% from 1.15 million to 640,000, a
welcome improvement for both passengers and airlines. The vast
majority of mishandled bags are reunited with their owners in less
than 48 hours and in 2011 only a small fraction, just 2.47% of the
mishandled bags, or 640,000 bags, failed to show up at all
compared with 3.56% or 1.15 million bags in 2010.
The SITA Baggage Report 2012 describes how the rapid adoption of
mobile devices, and the evolution of the “me-centric” passenger,
has created demand for real-time information to be delivered to
handheld devices. At the same time self-service bag check-in and
tracing are also expected. For airlines and airports to meet these
passenger expectations an improvement in the quality, accuracy and
sharing of data in relation to baggage movements is required. All
the stakeholders – ground handlers, airlines, and airports – have
to be part of the collaborative process ensuring synchronicity of
data flow behind the scenes.
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