Air Canada CEO sees ‘darkest period’ in aviation history

Air Canada signs are seen at the empty baggage claim area of Terminal 5 at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) during the outbreak of the novel coronavirus, which causes COVID-19, April 16, 2020, in Los Angeles. - Air Canada on May 4, 2020 announced a loss of more than Can $1 billion (US $710 million) in the first quarter as the coronavirus pandemic shut down air travel worldwide.The colossal loss followed six consecutive years of profits for the flagship Canadian airline, which has had to slash capacity by 90 percent in the face of the crisis. (Photo by VALERIE MACON / AFP)


Canada’s largest airline on Monday announced a billion-dollar loss and announced mandatory temperature checks for customers amid the coronavirus pandemic.

We’re now living through the darkest period ever in the history of commercial aviation, significantly worse than 9/11, SARS and the 2008 financial crisis, CEO Calin Rovinescu said on a conference call with analysts Monday.

The US-Canada border remains closed to all nonessential travel.

Since mid-March, the airline has slashed its flight schedule by more than 90 per cent and grounded more than 200 aircraft, cutting service internationally to just five airports.

The company burned USD 22 million Canadian (USD16 million) in cash per day in March.

Air Canada said it lost USD 1.05 billion Canadian (US$ 748 million) in its first quarter, compared with a profit of USD 345 million in the same quarter last year as governments imposed travel restrictions around the world due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The airline said remaining flights will be subject to an infrared temperature check at all airports. It already requires customers to wear face coverings.

The airline also said customer in economy class won’t be required to sit immediately next to another. Hand sanitizer will also be distributed.