The airline industry’s focus on improving
baggage management is showing strong results with 2015 baggage
mishandling rates dropping to their lowest ever.
According to the
SITA Baggage Report 2016, the rate of mishandled bags was 6.5 bags
per thousand passengers in 2015, down 10.5% from the previous
year, less than half the rate in 2003 and the lowest ever
recorded.
This improvement comes despite an 85% rise in
passenger numbers since 2003. Increasing passenger volumes put
pressure on the industry's infrastructure, resources and baggage
handling systems. Last year more than 3.5 billion passengers
travelled and with no sign that this growth will slow down, the
industry is making step-changes to how it handles baggage.
IATA is leading the way
with its call for airlines to track each bag throughout its entire
journey. IATA Resolution 753, to be implemented by airlines by
June 2018, will mean that bags will be tracked at every point of
the journey.
“Over the next three years bag tracking will be in the spotlight
as airlines ready themselves to implement IATA’s Resolution 753.
This increase in visibility will provide more control and drive
further improvements in bag handling,” said Francesco Violante,
CEO, SITA. “It also
means that passengers will be able track their bag, just like a
parcel, which will reduce anxiety and allow them to take fast action if flights are disrupted and their bags are delayed.”
Another area of change identified in SITA’s report is
the growth of self-service bag services. Around 40% of airlines
and airports now provide self-bag-tag printing at kiosks and more
than three quarters are expected to do so by 2018. Almost a third
of passengers expect to be using bag-drop – either a dedicated
staffed station or fully self-service – in 2016.
How bags are tagged for their journey is also evolving. Over the
past year there has been progress across the industry on permanent
electronic tags which offer passengers independence and can reduce
waiting times. Airlines are now trialing these tags which
passengers update with their flight information for each journey
via a mobile phone app. Home-printed bag tags, which offer passengers similar benefits, are a lower cost option being used by
several airlines today.
“The
baggage statistics for 2015 are very encouraging, however in
total, mishandled bags still cost the industry $2.3 billion last
year. While this is a 3.75% reduction from 2014 it is clear that
this must remain an area of focus for the industry. Passenger
experience is paramount and improving baggage handling will
deliver improvements for passengers along with cost savings. The
technology is available to support increased tracking and improved
tracing and SITA is working across the air transport community to
deliver efficiencies,” added Violante.
Today, more than 200 airports and 500 airlines worldwide use
SITA
baggage management solutions. By facilitating communications
between airlines and local baggage handling and reconciliation
systems, SITA helps ensure that bags reach their correct
destination. Its proprietary BagMessage system delivers more than
2.5 billion messages between airline departure control systems and
automated baggage systems annually. And more than 2,800 airport
locations use WorldTracer, SITA's system which traces mishandled bags globally.
See also:
Future of Air Travel - HD Video Interview with SITA President for
Asia Pacific.
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Luggage,
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