Dubai’s state airport operator is hoping for a “flood” of travellers as the coronavirus pandemic eases, targeting passenger traffic through Dubai International Airport to grow 8% to 28mn this year as demand rebuilds.
Terminal 1 is reopening this Thursday after a 15-month closure.
Operations were consolidated through Terminals 2 and 3 last year as the pandemic took hold.
“People think it will trickle back. I don’t believe that. I believe it will be an absolute flood of demand when people get the confidence to travel again,” Dubai Airports chief executive Paul Griffiths told Reuters yesterday.
The airport, one of the world’s busiest, could see over 40mn passengers this year if it was “really, really lucky,” Griffiths said, though it was likely to be somewhere between 24.7mn and 34.3mn. “We’re comfortable with that mid-range of about 28 (mn).”
Terminal 1 has an annual passenger capacity of 18mn, while the entire airport can handle up to 100mn.
Griffiths estimated the terminal’s reopening would result in 3,500 additional jobs at the airport, including those working in retail, hospitality, security and immigration.
By the autumn, 90% of the 260 destinations served from Dubai airport prior to the pandemic could be restored, Griffiths said, up from 63% today.
Dubai announced on Saturday some restrictions on passengers flying from India, South Africa and Nigeria would ease from Wednesday.
The airport handled 5.75mn passengers in the first quarter, a 67.8% fall compared to the same quarter in 2020 before the pandemic halted traffic.
In 2020, passenger traffic plummeted 70% to 25.9mn from 86.4mn in 2019.
The airport is the base of state carriers Emirates and flydubai whose entire operations are international flights.
Over a two-week period starting Thursday, 66 foreign airlines will move from Terminal 2 and 3 to Terminal 1.
Terminal 3, where Emirates operates from, will continue to operate with two of its three concourses for the time being.
Dubai’s second airport, Al Maktoum International, will also remain closed to commercial passenger flights.
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