IATA has called on the government of Thailand to
urgently address safety, capacity and cost issues in order to keep
Thailand’s aviation sector competitive.
“Aviation is critical to Thailand’s economic
success. It is the backbone of the tourism industry and provides
critical global business links,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director
General and CEO. “We estimate that today aviation and related
activities account for some 2 million Thai jobs and generate $29
billion in GDP. And by 2035 we could see that grow to 3.8 million
jobs and $53 billion in GDP. If realized, that potential 83%
growth would have a broad and positive impact across the Thai
economy. It is in jeopardy, however, unless key issues of safety,
capacity and costs are addressed urgently.”
Safety oversight concerns have been raised by both
the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) and the US
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). The US
FAA ranks Thailand in Category 2 of its International Aviation
Safety Assessment program.
“These assessments look at what the government
is doing - not the airlines. Thai Airways and Bangkok Airways are
IATA members and, along with Thai Lion Air and Orient Thai
Airlines are on the registry of the IATA Operational Safety Audit
(IOSA). This demonstrates that they are operating to the highest
global standards for operational safety. ICAO and the US FAA have
pointed out safety oversight concerns and divergence from global
standards at the government level. Safety is aviation’s top
priority. The Government of Thailand must address these concerns
in support of a vibrant aviation sector that is the backbone of
travel and tourism,” Tyler said.
IATA has also asked
Thailand to mandate IOSA as a requirement for all Thai-registered
airlines.
“This would not absolve the government of its
responsibility to do better in aligning its oversight programs to
global standards. But it would send a strong signal that Thailand
is serious about its commitment to world-class safety,” Tyler said.
With over 50
million annual passengers, Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport ranks amongst the top air hubs in the world,
but it faces several issues
which IATA says must be resolved. IATA called on the Thai Government to adopt a strategy that would concentrate traffic at Suvarnabhumi as
the Thai capital’s major airport hub and address the following:
Safety concerns about “soft spots” on the tarmac,
taxiways and apron. IATA said that aircraft
frequently get “stuck” in the soft surfaces that are the result of
sub-standard materials. The extra power and towing needed to
maneuver through these surfaces is a safety risk to ground
personnel, ground vehicles and aircraft. On top of that, frequent
surface repairs create congestion.
“The constant resurfacing of
the tarmac, taxiways and apron area with asphalt is an
unacceptable patchwork solution. We literally need a “concrete”
solution,” said Tyler.
The airport also faces a capacity
crunch. Suvarnabhumi is handling over 52 million passengers. This
already exceeds the terminal design capacity of 45 million while
demand is growing by 10% annually. Fast tracking the Phase Two
terminal expansion would provide much needed terminal capacity.
IATA has called for third runway plans at Suvarnabhumi to move
forward.
“A permanent fix for the frequent tarmac, taxiway and
apron closures for resurfacing will address near-term runway
capacity concerns. But a runway takes a long-time to build, so it
is important that that plans for the third runway continue to move
forward,” said Tyler.
IATA also called for broad stakeholder
consultation in the development of a long-term master plan to guide
the development of Thailand’s airport infrastructure.
“In the face of intense competition, Thailand’s aviation
competitiveness is being chipped away with various new or
increased taxes and charges. It is in Thailand’s long-term
self-interest to review and abandon proposals that increase the
cost of transportation. That includes taxes or charges,” said
Tyler.
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