Geography of the Passenger Turnover Dynamics at Airports in Europeand Russia’s Regions in the First Year of the COVID-19 PandemicстатьяИсследовательская статья
Статья опубликована в журнале из списка RSCI Web of Science
Информация о цитировании статьи получена из
Scopus
Статья опубликована в журнале из перечня ВАК
Статья опубликована в журнале из списка Web of Science и/или Scopus
Дата последнего поиска статьи во внешних источниках: 8 апреля 2022 г.
Аннотация:Due to restrictions on people’s movement as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, the air passenger traffic sharply decreased in 2020. A geographic study of this phenomenon is highly relevant. The article describes the features of the spread of the pandemic across Europe from a transport–geographical viewpoint; reveals differences in the negative passenger turnover dynamics at large and medium-sized airports in 49 European countries (including Russia) impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic during the first year. The changes were measured absolutely and relatively, which made it possible to identify the types of their dynamics: catastrophic, strong, medium, moderate, weak, and insignificant declines. Geographically, the spread of COVID-19 was extremely uneven: at first, the epidemic covered large countries of Europe (Northern Italy became the main center after Wuhan), then closely related neighboring and more distant countries were involved; last but not least, the Balkan countries and countries in post-Soviet Eastern Europe. The diseasespread hierarchically. The first cases arrived by air, first from the main centers, whence coronavirus infectionwas then transmitted to other countries by new groups of air passengers. Then, the infection was transmitted by ground transport passengers within the zones of influence of the largest airports. The airports of European countries are characterized by a strong decline in passenger turnover (65–85%); Russian regions, by moderate (30–45%) and weak (15–30%) declines. The retrodegression time lag (return to the values of the distant past) turned out to be the largest (27–40 years) for the largest European airports with a large share of international passengers and transit, relatively medium (16–26 years)—for medium-sized or large airports with alarge share of domestic transportation, relatively short (9–16 years) — for the largest airports in Russia with ahigh proportion of international passengers, short (4–8 years) — for almost all other airports in Russia, very short (2–3 years) — for resort and tourist airports in Russia and some airports with an increased share ofdomestic passengers. Since different airports had different dynamics of passenger turnover, the ranks of theirhierarchy in 2020 changed somewhat: before, the largest airports gave way to others, which bypassed the firstones due to a smaller level of recession and rapid recovery in the volume of domestic air traffic.