The economic impact of the volcanic cloud halting flights across Europe will rise sharply the longer disruption continues, forcing holiday cancelations, delaying deliveries and reducing jet fuel demand.
African exporters of flowers and vegetables by air to European supermarkets, technology companies relying on “just-in-time” deliveries of components, event organizers and others could all feel the pinch.
Economists say so far, they have not changed their models or predictions for European growth, hoping normal service could resume this week. However, in a worst-case scenario in which the ash cloud closes European airspace for months, one economist estimates lost travel and tourism revenue alone could knock 1 to 2 percentage points off regional growth as long as it lasts.
European growth had been predicted at 1 percent to 1.5 percent for this year.
“That would mean a lot of European countries wouldn’t get any growth this year,” said Vanessa Rossi, senior economic fellow at Chatham House. “It would literally stifle the recovery, but the problem is it is incredibly hard to predict what will happen. Even the geologists can’t tell us.”
‘BLACK SWAN’
The event is a classic example of a “Black Swan,” a totally unexpected event with widespread impact, impossible to predict and hard to model.
The key questions now are whether the volcano keeps erupting and spewing ash into the atmosphere, where the wind takes the ash and how long the ash already in the sky remains over Europe.
Travel and tourism accounts for about 5 percent of GDP, or about US$3 trillion, with Europe accounting for a third of that, much of it accruing over the summer months.
Not all of this will be lost, but Rossi estimated a prolonged shutdown could cost the industry up to US$5 billion to US$10 billion a week.
However, the impact will likely be wider. Most of the world’s goods by volume may move by sea and land, but transport analysts estimate 40 percent by value moves by air.
The world’s biggest air freight operators say they are moving what they can by road and looking at contingency plans of using southern European airports that are outside the cloud.
DELIVERIES
Deliveries will be sharply affected, however, they said.
“If your just-in-time operation is depending on parts that come from Asia or the US or Africa or the Mideast ... you just can’t get it,” United Parcel Service Inc spokesman Norman Black said.
“DHL and UPS use airhubs in Germany, Fedex Corp relies on an airhub in France and all that airspace is closed. There’s just not an option right at the moment while we all wait and see how long this is going to take,” he said.
Most food and beverage deliveries move by sea, but some premium products such as the finest Scotch whiskeys — retailing at hundreds of dollars a bottle in China or Japan — can no longer be moved.
That could mean the most vulnerable national economies to the shutdown could prove to be African producers of fruit and flowers that will swiftly perish if not shipped to market.
“Kenya, as the largest supplier of cut flowers to Europe, where tourism is also an important sector, is likely to be the most vulnerable, followed by the east African soft commodity producers more generally,” said Standard Chartered chief Africa economist Razia Khan, herself stranded in Botswana by a canceled flight.
The International Air Transport Association estimates airlines are losing US$200 million a day from the shutdown, which has caused chaos well beyond the immediate European airspace closed.
INSURANCE
Most airlines will be uninsured for this loss, although insurer Munich Re said on Friday it would consider offering cancelation insurance in future should the crisis produce demand.
TUI Travel, Europe’s largest tourism operator, said yesterday that the disruption caused by Icelandic volcanic ash had so far cost the group about £20 million (US$30.5 million).
The UK firm, which owns Airtours, First Choice and Thomson, said that daily costs were forecast to run between £5 million and £6 million as flights stay grounded.
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