Airline seat squeeze raises health and safety concerns

Monday, 27 April 2015 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

  • Aircraft makers adds more rows and extra seats abreast
  • Reduced leg room triggering more air rage
  • Seat makers try to distract with hi-tech extras

Passengers seats are seen on board of Norwegian Airways Boening 737-800 at Berlin Schoenefeld Airport 2 April, 2015. Aircraft registration number is LN-LGF– REUTERS

BERLIN (Reuters): Airlines are packing ever more seats into economy class to protect profit margins from falling ticket prices, prompting concerns over health and safety from travellers and crew. Slim-line designs, extra emergency exits and creative placing of galleys and toilets are all playing their part in the great seat squeeze, say industry watchers. “If you’re a dog, you have very specific rules, but if you’re a human being there are no specific rules as to what is humane,” Charlie Leocha, the head of consumer group Travelers United, told a US government advisory committee examining the issue in Washington D.C. this week. Seat pitch – the distance from one seat to the same spot on the one in front or behind – has shrunk to as little as 28 inches on some flights, against the more common 31 or 32 inches for economy, according to seat makers. Aircraft manufacturers Boeing and Airbus are increasing the number of places that can be squeezed in per row. Making things even tighter for passengers, airlines have got better at managing ticket sales and filling planes, meaning the middle seat is rarely left free. The economic factors are clear. Average ticket prices are expected to fall by 5% this year, according to industry body IATA, while airlines are expected to make it their best net profit margin in five years, albeit at just 3.2%. But the health and safety impacts are still being debated. The lack of space has triggered more outbreaks of air rage, Julie Frederick from the Association of Professional Flight Attendants told the Washington D.C. hearing of the Advisory Committee for Aviation Consumer Protections. Several flights had to divert after passengers got into fights over reclining seats and lack of leg room last year. It was also making it harder for crew to get to anyone needing medical help, Frederick added. The number of passengers a type of aircraft is allowed to carry is mainly defined by how quickly people can exit in an emergency, hence the extra exits. Some low-cost airlines such as Ryanair, Spirit and Allegiant have already found one way round the reclining seat problem – the fixed shell of their non-reclining seats also makes them cheaper to construct. Zodiac and other seat makers have tried bringing in compensations for economy passengers – extras from tablet holders to in-seat power were on show at this week’s Aircraft Interiors Expo in Hamburg. Germany’s Recaro showed economy seats with foot rests, in-seat USB and power outlets, a mouldable head-rest, a 13.3 inch Panasonic monitor and mood lighting. Panasonic Avionics has worked with seat maker B/E Aerospace on a new economy class seat called Jazz that includes a discreet ‘do not disturb’ light, inductive charging for devices and an HDMI slot. “Economy seats are on a downward trend, but airlines are adding in perks to make you forget more quickly just how squeezed in you are,” said Jason Rabinowitz, Data Research Manager at Routehappy, which rates flight cabins. “The more seats are shrinking, the more technology they’re packing in,” Rabinowitz added. “The jury is still out as to whether passengers will forget though.”

Airbus eyes new seat choices as economy traffic booms

  Reuters: Airbus plans to offer airlines more choice in the way they configure their planes, and sees carriers opting for different levels of comfort within their economy cabins, a senior Airbus executive said on Wednesday. It also plans to redefine the capacity of its wide-body jets to add premium economy to the traditional economy and business classes to recognise market trends, Chris Emerson, head of marketing at Airbus, said in a telephone interview. Airbus now offers 8-abreast seating as the standard coach-class layout on its widebody A330, for example, but can offer 9 seats per row where airlines want to offer a leaner product in exchange for lower fares. Nine-abreast is of particular interest to Asian airlines serving price-sensitive customers, Emerson said. There is also interest in a 10-abreast A350 rather than the normal 9-abreast layout for that jet, he said. “90% of global air traffic is in the economy segment,” he said.
 

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