The SITA 2019 Baggage IT Insights report, airlines
that are adding tracking at more points of the baggage journey are
enjoying a huge improvement in bag delivery globally.
The report shows that where tracking is done at check-in and
loading onto the aircraft, the rate of improvement is as high as
66%.
These results come as the record drop in the
baggage mishandling rate achieved globally over the past decade
plateaus, with the rate steady at around 5.7 bags per thousand
passengers over the past three years. In 2018, the rate was 5.69
per thousand passengers.
Over the past year, an
increasing number of airlines and airports have started to
introduce tracking at key points in the journey – check-in,
loading onto the aircraft, transfers and arrival – to improve
baggage management and further reduce the chances of a bag being
mishandled.
SITA’s research provides the first glimpse of the
success of this tracking. It reveals that where bags were being
tracked when loaded onto the aircraft, the rate of improvement
ranged between 38% and 66% depending on the level of tracking
introduced.
Peter Drummond, Director of Baggage at
SITA, said, “While the mishandling rate has started to plateau
over the past few years, this comes against a continued growth in
passenger numbers and their bags. In 2018, 4.36 billion travelers
checked in more than 4.27 billion bags. More bags makes things
more challenging. Everyone across the industry needs to look beyond the process and technology improvements made in the past
decade and adopt the latest technology such as tracking to make
the next big cut in the rate of mishandled bags.”
Transferring baggage
from one aircraft, or airline, to another remains a pinch point in
the journey and in 2018 it was again the main reason for bags
being mishandled. Transfer bags accounted for 46% of all
mishandled bags.
“Transfer is by far the
most difficult stage to track a bag as there are multiple airlines
and airports involved. However, data from this year’s report shows
that tracking at key points in the journey, such as transfers,
will go a long way to eliminating mishandling and will allow
airlines and their passengers to keep tabs on where their bags are
at every step of the way,” Drummond added.
Over the past decade,
total number of mishandled bags per annum has plummeted 47% from
46.9 million in 2007 to 24.8 million in 2018, while the annual
bill footed by the industry has shrunk 43% to $2.4 billion, down
from $4.22 billion in 2007.
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