Showing posts with label How Safe Are You From Covid-19 When You Fly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label How Safe Are You From Covid-19 When You Fly. Show all posts

How Safe Are You From Covid-19 When You Fly

How Safe Are You From Covid-19 When You Fly

More people are flying every day, as Covid restrictions ease and vaccinations accelerate. But dangerous variants have led to deadly new outbreaks, raising questions about just how safe it is to travel now.

How air circulates in an Airplane:

In most single-aisle models, we are constantly breathing a mixture of fresh and recirculated air.

In an airplane, the air is blown in from ceiling ducts and sucked out through vents near the floors. Half of the air that is sucked out is released from the plane, and the other half is filtered and eventually sent back into the cabin. With the help of researchers, we simulated more than 2 million air particles to understand how they flow within the cabin, and how potential viral elements may pose a risk.

Air is refreshed roughly every two to three minutes — a higher rate than in grocery stores and other indoor spaces, experts say. It’s one reason, in addition to safety protocols, that there have not been many super spreader events documented on flights. 

The high exchange rate on planes forces new and existing cabin air to mix evenly, to minimize pockets of air that could become stale or linger for too long.

But that doesn’t mean flights are completely safe. This is what happens when someone wearing a mask sneezes on board. As air blows from the sides, particles move toward the aisle, where they combine with air from the opposite row.

Not all particles are the same size, and most don’t contain infectious viral matter. But if passengers nearby weren’t wearing masks, even briefly to eat a snack, the sneezed air could increase their chances of inhaling viral particles.

This is what would happen if people sneezed in different parts of the plane. To prevent air from circulating throughout the cabin, the ventilation system keeps it contained to a few rows.

By design, the ventilation system is integral to how a plane operates: The system is powered by the engines that propel the plane, constantly sucking in outside air that is then pressurized and conditioned to control for temperature.

Pressurization plays a key role because air at cruising altitude is thin it is good for flying fast, but not great for providing oxygen to breathe.

After air snakes into the plane and is conditioned, it eventually climbs up riser pipes to the ceiling ducts that help distribute the air into the cabin.

Throughout the flight, cabin air is periodically sucked through two HEPA filters into a manifold under the floor, where fresh and recirculated air are mixed. Each filter has 12 panels of densely pleated fiberglass mesh that catch most microscopic particles.

Ventilation systems vary slightly among plane makers, but most have similar filtration and recirculation methods.

Once air has been pulled out of the cabin, the portion that will not be recirculated leaves the rear of the plane through a valve that helps to constantly adjust cabin pressure.

The risks beyond flights:

How air flows in planes is not the only part of the safety equation, according to infectious disease experts: The potential for exposure may be just as high, if not higher, when people are in the terminal, sitting in airport restaurants and bars or going through the security line.

As more people fly — Congestion and Crowding in parts of the airport can make physical distancing a greater challenge. Airports vary in size and passenger volume, configurations and on-location businesses. That could increase the chances of exposure depending on where people linger and for how long. 

Going to in-terminal restaurants, for example, can be risky because masks are routinely removed and kept off to eat. 

Many airports were not designed to mitigate the airborne spread of respiratory pathogens. Although some airports have installed new or additional filtration systems, distancing, vigilance and other safety practices are still crucial.

Loses faced by Indian Aviation industry due to covid-19:

The COVID-19 pandemic had a massive impact on the Indian aviation sector in 2020 and major airlines facing losses and challenging times laid-off employees, sent them on leave without pay, or cut their salaries.

When the pandemic started spreading across the country, all scheduled international flights and domestic passenger flights were suspended from March 23 and March 25, respectively. Scheduled domestic flights were restarted in a limited manner from May 25. The effect of this disruption can be gauged by the loss figures of India's two largest airlines. IndiGo incurred net losses of ₹ 2,884 crore and ₹ 1,194 crore in Q1 and Q2 of this fiscal respectively. SpiceJet posted net losses of ₹ 600 crore and ₹ 112 crore in Q1 and Q2, respectively.

The revival of overseas travel under Vande Bharat Mission is expected to be slower and more challenging than domestic. This will hurt Air India in particular as around 60 per cent of its revenue was earlier generated from international operations.

In October that the Indian aviation industry will lose a combined $ 6-6.5 billion in FY21, of which airlines will account for $ 4-4.5 billion. As a result, the government's plan to sell Air India has been hit.

SpiceJet and IndiGo cut the salaries of all employees by 10-30 percent and 5-25 percent, respectively. In July, IndiGo also laid off 10 percent of its workforce. AirAsia India in April has cut the salaries of its senior employees by up to 20 percent. 

Bhawana Aggarwal [MBA IIM-s]

Manager FinTech

AirCrews Aviation Pvt. Ltd.

Bhawana@Air-Aviator.com

https://bhawanaaggarwal.vcardinfo.com

 +91 98703 15314