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Singapore Airlines, SilkAir cut flight capacity by 7.1% as coronavirus infection spreads

Clement Yong (The Straits Times/Asia News Network)
Singapore
Tue, February 25, 2020

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Singapore Airlines, SilkAir cut flight capacity by 7.1% as coronavirus infection spreads Singapore Airlines A350-900 ULR aircraft on Changi International Airport in Singapore. (JP/Jessicha Valentina)

N

ational carrier Singapore Airlines (SIA) and its regional arm SilkAir announced additional cuts to their flights between February and May on Monday night, following their decision last Tuesday to cancel more than 700 flights due to weak demand amid the coronavirus outbreak.

Taken together, the cancellations will cut the scheduled capacity of the two airlines by 7.1 per cent from February to May, SIA said in a Facebook post.

Air travel has been hard hit across the world as the disease, officially called Covid-19, nears its second month after it began in Wuhan, China, in December last year.

There are now more than 79,000 confirmed cases of infection worldwide, with Iran, Italy, South Korea and others countries fighting to contain the spread.

SIA Group, which apart from SIA also includes subsidiaries SilkAir and Scoot, said it will be "nimble and flexible" in its adjustments to match changing demand patterns, and will notify and re-accommodate affected customers onto other flights.

It added that those who booked their tickets through a travel agency should contact the agent for assistance, while those who booked directly with SIA can contact the airline's reservations team on 6223-8888.

Travelers can check the full list of affected flights.

Aviation analysts The Straits Times has spoken to said similar moves should be expected of other airlines, given a global reduction in travel as companies stop sending their employees for business trips and conferences.

They have also said that the bulk of the cuts would be in May, which is already an off-peak travel season with low demand.


This article appeared on The Straits Times newspaper website, which is a member of Asia News Network and a media partner of The Jakarta Post
 

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