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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Brett Gibbons

Heathrow passenger forecasts rise with 1,000 more security staff recruited to cope

Heathrow Airport has increased its 2022 passenger number forecast from 45.5 million to nearly 53 million following a strong April when 5.1 million people used the international hub. Heathrow said outbound leisure travellers and people cashing in airline vouchers obtained for trips cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic are driving the recovery in demand, which it expects to last throughout the summer.

The forecast means Heathrow expects passenger numbers to reach 65 per cent of pre-pandemic levels this year. This is a “realistic assessment”, the airport insisted.

Despite the increase in passenger numbers, Heathrow delivered a strong service throughout the Easter getaway – with 97 per cent of passengers through security within 10 minutes compared to queues of more than three hours at other airports.

To avoid any future delays for passengers, the airport will reopen Terminal 4 by July and it is already recruiting up to 1,000 new security officers to fill vacancies. However, airlines have accused Heathrow of playing down the recovery of demand as part of efforts to convince the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) to allow it to raise fees further.

The regulator is in the final stages of setting a five-year cap on the airport’s charges. Heathrow expects to remain loss-making through the year and does not forecast paying dividends to shareholders in 2022.

Heathrow chief executive John Holland-Kaye said: “We all want to see travel get back to pre-pandemic levels as quickly as possible, and while I am encouraged by the rise in passenger numbers, we also have to be realistic. There are significant challenges ahead – the CAA can either plan for them with a robust and adaptable regulatory settlement that delivers for passengers and withstands any shocks, or it can prioritise airline profits by cutting back on passenger service leaving the industry to scramble when things go wrong in future.”

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