Customer concerns over the H1N1 flu have subsided and there is currently no major impact of the virus on air travel in the region, the chief executive Customer concerns over the H1N1 flu have subsided and there is currently no major impact of the virus on air travel in the region, the chief executive

By Soren Billing

Customer concerns over the H1N1 flu have subsided and there is currently no major impact of the virus on air travel in the region, the chief executive of Air Arabia has said.

Airline travellers have become more confident after learning more about how to protect themselves against the virus, Adel Ali told Arabian Business on the sidelines of a press conference.

“I think H1N1 has been contained. We have seen people who panicked…gain confidence,” he said.

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The company said in August that “many people” were not travelling due fears over swine flu, and said it could be a bigger threat to the industry than the slumping economy.

“There will be a little impact this year on the Hajj season obviously, because some countries decided not to let people go, but overall I don’t think it’s a major threat,” he said.

But he cautioned that things could change “in days and weeks to come”.

Rising passenger numbers should not be taken as a sign that the industry, which is suffering globally from overcapacity, is out of the woods, he said.

“I think times are going to be tough in 2009 but we’re seeing a trend of at least more people travelling, which hopefully will drive the yields up,” he said.

“It’s too early to say that the problems are behind us, but there is certainly at the moment light at the end of the tunnel.”

Global airline industry revenues for the year are expected to fall by $80bn, or 15 percent, to $455 billion compared with 2008 levels, according to the International Air Transport Association (IATA).

The industry body last month revised downwards its estimate for global industry losses by $2 billion to $11 billion.