Business Travel News Europe’s rundown of most-read news
stories this year encapsulates the rollercoaster journey this industry has been
on in 2022. From the loosening of international travel restrictions in
the early months of the year and the subsequent spike in travel, to staff
shortages, flight cancellations, rising costs, labour strikes and, most recently, talk of an
impending recession in 2023.
While carefully orchestrated launches, reports and
announcements from the industry’s big players are always well-read, it’s
invariably the off-diary news and developing stories that receive the most
attention.
This year was no different, with developments at Air
France-KLM generating several of the year's most-read news, including the top story of the year as BTN Europe broke the
news of KLM's surreptitious introduction of a €250 ‘congestion surcharge’ at Amsterdam
Schiphol airport – and the airline’s subsequent climbdown in the face of an industry
backlash.
The sister airlines between them were no strangers to
the headlines this year, with two developments in December also featuring among
the most-read of the year: the suspension of their agency booking tool following
the detection of a “number” of fraud cases and the unrelated – and ongoing –
dispute between Air France and Flight Centre Group subsidiary 3Mundi in which
the airline said it will prevent the TMC selling its tickets due to alleged
“irregularities” in the display of flight prices.
Most-read in 2022
(month by month)
January Air France and KLM add SAF surcharge to airfares
Read story
February Germany among the latest countries to relax travel restrictions
Read story
March UK's Passenger Locator Form 'to be gone by Easter'
Read story
April Shell selects new global travel management provider
Read story
May Traveldoo put up for sale by Expedia group
Read story
June Future of travel tech company PSNGR1 in doubt (Snowfall later steps in to secure its future)
Read story
July Lufthansa ticket prices soar following flight cancellations
Read story
August Germany pushes for pay-as-you-fly model
Read story
September KLM introduces €250 surcharge at Schiphol... and removes it after "internal review"
Read story
October Pilot strike in Italy to disrupt more than 300,000 travellers
Read story
November PWC forecasts 2023 hotel rate increases in face of economic headwinds
Read story
December Air France and KLM suspend booking tool due to fraud cases
Read story
The airlines’ introduction of a SAF surcharge at the start
of the year also ranked highly while in September BTN Europe broke the news
that the airlines would further postpone the introduction of its GDS surcharge
for business travel agencies, with the fee now due to be levied from the end of
Q1 2023. That story took a further twist at the end of November when several
French TMCs heavily criticised the airlines and threatened action of their
own.
Travel restrictions fall
Away from developments at Air France-KLM, the early months
of the year were dominated by news of Covid travel restrictions being relaxed,
with a report on the potential demise of the UK’s despised Passenger Locator
Form featuring in the year’s ten most-read stories.
February, March and April proved bumper months for such
developments as France, Finland and Norway relaxed Covid travel rules, Singapore
announced it would relax entry rules from 1 April, Ireland removed all Covid
travel rules, Malaysia announced its imminent reopening to international
visitors, and Australia moved to scrap pre-departure tests.
At the end of February, a new business travel association
showed its hand, with 13 buyer organisations uniting to form BT4Europe,
a non‐profit association created to give business travel buyers a stronger
voice in Europe.
In April, Advantage Travel Partnership CEO Julia Lo Bue-Said
issued a note of caution even in the face of booming business while the following
month Virgin Atlantic said corporate recovery was ahead of expectations.
News around pricing and rising costs all featured
prominently, with CWT’s forecast of price rises continuing into 2023 ranking highly
on the most-read list, together with soaring air fares in the wake of
cancellations and the news of European hotel prices exceeding pre-pandemic
levels, according to one source.
Staff shortages hit the industry
Uppermost on many travel managers’ minds was – and still is,
in some cases – ongoing staff shortages affecting service levels at travel
management companies. In June, the UK’s ITM buyer members called for greater
transparency about staff shortages and in September BTA chair Suzanne Horner warned
“staffing has been and will continue to be a massive struggle” for the industry.
Back in May, a report from Barclays Corporate Banking identified the
talent crunch as the biggest barrier to recovery.
Staffing shortages also led to the introduction of capacity
caps at several major European airports, including at London Heathrow from July, at
Frankfurt airport the same month, and at Amsterdam Schiphol where the cap remains in place.
TMCs in the spotlight
News of mergers, acquisitions and major account wins
regularly appear in BTN Europe’s most-read chart and this year they included
TripActions’ purchase of German TMC Comtravo in February, Shell’s appointment
of FCM as its global TMC, the takeover of the UK’s Eton Travel by TakeTwo
Travel Solutions, the government of the Netherland’s new travel partners, and
Sabre’s acquisition of Conferma Pay, which BTN Europe revealed.
More most-read TMC news came in the shape of American
Express Global Business Travel boss Paul Abbott’s interview with the BTN Group
in February in which he said the industry faces a “defining moment” and, in May,
the start of the TMC’s life as a public company; ATPI’s spinning off of some
of its tech products as standalone company TripStax; and the acquisition of UK-based Norad
Travel Group by Israel’s Talma Shlomo Travel Solutions.
• See also The 16th annual GITs: the travel awards no one wants to win, and The 2023 Outlook.