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Passengers want to use biometrics to expedite travel processes

Posted: 15 November 2021 | | No comments yet

The International Air Transport Association has released the results of its 2021 Global Passenger Survey, showing passenger’s willingness to use biometrics if it accelerates travel processes.

Passengers want to use biometrics to speed up airport processes

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) announced the results of its 2021 Global Passenger Survey (GPS), which delivered two main conclusions:

  • Passengers want to use biometric identification if it expedites travel processes.
  • Passengers want to spend less time queuing.  

“Passengers have spoken and want technology to work harder, so they spend less time ‘being processed’ or standing in queues. They are willing to use biometric data if it delivers this result. Before traffic ramps-up, we have a window of opportunity to ensure a smooth return to travel post-COVID-19 pandemic and deliver long-term efficiency improvements for passengers, airlines, airports and governments,” said Nick Careen, IATA’s Senior Vice President for Operations, Safety and Security. 

Biometric Identification

  • 73 per cent of passengers are willing to share their biometric data to improve airport processes (up from 46 per cent in 2019). 
  • 88 per cent will share immigration information prior to departure for expedited processing.

Just over a third of passengers (36 per cent) have experienced the use of biometric data when traveling. Of these, 86 per cent were satisfied with the experience. 

Data protection remains a key issue with 56 per cent indicating concern about data breaches. Passengers want clarity on who their data is being shared with (52 per cent) and how it is used/processed (51 per cent). 

Queuing

  • 55 per cent of passengers identified queuing at boarding as a top area for improvement. 
  • 41 per cent of passengers identified queuing at security screening as a top priority for improvement.
  • 38 per cent of passenger identified queuing time at border control/immigration as a top area for improvement. 

With additional document checks for COVID-19, processing time at airports is taking longer. Pre-COVID-19, the average passengers spent 1.5 hours in travel processes (check-in, security, border control, customs, and baggage claim). Current data indicates that airport processing times have ballooned to three hours during peak time with travel volumes at only about 30 per cent of pre-COVID-19 levels. The greatest increases are at check-in and border control (emigration and immigration) where travel health credentials are being checked mainly as paper documents. 

This exceeds the time that passengers want to spend on processes at the airport. The survey found that:

  • 85 per cent of passengers want to spend less than 45 mins on processes at the airport if they are traveling with only hand luggage.
  • 90 per cent of passengers want to spend less than one hour on processes at the airport when traveling with a checked bag. 

Solutions

IATA, working with industry stakeholders, has two mature programmes which can support a successful ramping-up of aviation post-pandemic and provide travelers with the expedited experience they are demanding.

  • IATA Travel Pass is a solution to manage the complex myriad of travel health credentials that governments require. The app offers a safe and secure way for travellers to check the requirements for their journey, receive test results and scan their vaccine certificates, verify that these meet the destination and transit requirements and share these effortlessly with health officials and airlines prior to departure and using e-gates. This will reduce queuing and congestion for document checks, to the benefit of travellers, airlines, airports, and governments.

  • One ID is an initiative that is helping transition industry towards a day when passengers can move from curb to gate using a single biometric travel token such as a face, fingerprint, or iris scan. Airlines are strongly behind the initiative. The priority now is ensuring there is regulation in place to support the vision of a paperless travel experience. One ID will not only make processes more efficient for passengers, but also allow governments to utilise valuable resources more effectively.

“We cannot just revert to how things were in 2019 and expect our customers to be satisfied. Pre-COVID-19 pandemic we were preparing to take self-service to the next level with One ID. The crisis makes its twin-promises of efficiency and cost-savings even more urgent. We absolutely need technologies like IATA Travel Pass to re-enable self-service or the recovery will be overwhelmed by paper document checks. The GPS results are yet another proof point that change is needed,” added Careen.

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