Sheremetyevo Looking at Two Options for Resuming Airport Operations After Coronavirus Pandemic

Sheremetyevo International Airport is looking at two scenarios for reopening as soon as possible after the coronavirus emergency ends, according to Sheremetyevo’s chairman, Alexander Ponomarenko, Yahoo Finance reported.

The first scenario involves the resumption of international flights in July and the gradual restoration of passenger traffic until the end of this year. The second is a much more complex scenario in which the restoration of passenger traffic to the level of 2019 will be much slower and will take at least 12 months. In that case, the airport would not reach its 2019 levels until mid-2021.

In an interview with Forbes Russia, Ponomarenko discussed the airport’s vigorous response to the pandemic and the prospects for resuming normal airport activity.

“Professionals who need to be at their workplaces accomplish a real feat. We express a huge human gratitude to our staff serving flights in Terminal F, to doctors who meet passengers around the clock; as well as all health workers in the world, those who are now at the forefront of the struggle and risk their lives and health,” Sheremetyevo’s Chairman said.

According to Ponomarenko, most construction projects at the airport have been frozen except for the construction of the first runway, which will continue before the winter cold sets in. The terminals would also be open again soon, once the pandemic has passed. Sheremetyevo will be monitoring the situation in Europe and watching how the European nations come out of the crisis and adjust the scenarios for SVO accordingly.

“I am sure that soon the world will manage the coronavirus. Humanity will overcome this crisis and learn very important lessons. Today, despite the existing contradictions, everyone has rallied around this disaster,” Ponomarenko points out. “People in all countries have realized the danger facing the world, show the highest consciousness, save thousands of other lives with their self-isolation.”