SEVILLE, Spain—Kyiv-Boryspil Airport director of commercial and strategy Sergiy Khyzhnyak said the airport is poised to resume operations within a month of it being safe to do so.
Speaking at World Routes in Seville, Khyzhnyak said restarting operations after three years of airspace closure—and two years of pandemic before that—will take “a lot of work.” However, the airport has been kept in a state of readiness for when that window of opportunity comes.
“I think the main challenge we have is uncertainty,” Khyzhnyak told Routes delegates during an April 8 panel session. “We did not know how long we had to prepare our resilience plan for. Is it for one week, for one month, for one year? And now the plans, which were designed to last a couple of weeks, have now obviously transformed into a long-term resilience plan.”
Securing insurance is also an issue. “At the moment, we cannot get any insurance at all, even for business-as-usual ground handling operations, because of war risks,” he said.
Kyiv-Boryspil is attending Routes Europe to maintain contact with its airline partners. “At the end of the day, it’s about safety and the airline is responsible,” Khyzhnyak said. “We have an internal deadline to be ready within one month [notice period] for the full, proper operations of scheduled flights.”
Airport staff have been retained on reduced salaries. Qualifications have been kept current and a fifth of the team are on rotation at the airport at any given time.
Latvian carrier airBaltic has voiced its desire to be one of the first airlines back into Ukraine, and airBaltic VP network development Mantas Vrubliauskas was a fellow panelist at the Routes Europe event. Vrubliauskas has visited Kyiv twice in the past two years.
“We had a full tour of the airport, both airside and landside, and it looks in perfect shape. If you didn’t know there was a war, you would think that it was just COVID, or something,” Vrubliauskas said. “There’s no physical sign of any damage, whatsoever. We went on the runway as well. It looks in perfect shape. It’s just sad that there’s not a single passenger in that terminal.”
Likewise, downtown Kyiv itself was “like a normal city,” with people socializing in cafes and restaurants. “Life is happening there,” Vrubliauskas said. “The air defenses are pretty good, at least around Kyiv, as far as I understand. Our hope is that we can start flying as soon as possible.”
During Vrubliauskas’ visit, the trains were full, and people were traveling to Europe for vacations. “They have 30 million border crossings each year, meaning that demand already is there,” he said. “But when the war is over, that can probably double or triple. The potential is huge, and the need for travel in Ukraine is also really, really big, even today.”
An audience member quizzed Vrubliauskas for more details of airBaltic’s Ukraine strategy. “We have a plan. Obviously, I don’t want to share all the details, but we have a plan,” he said. “We know what we want to do on Day One, what we want to do after perhaps a few months.”
AirBaltic will begin by resuming links to “at least” the Baltic countries with Kyiv and Lviv. “It’s going to be more than one route,” he said. “Let’s put it this way.”
When it does reopen, Kyiv is hoping to use Ukraine’s worldwide news exposure to attract new leisure visitors, as well as a strong airline mix to generate inbound and outbound passengers, and cargo flows. “It’s important to have a balanced supply, in terms of airlines,” Khyzhnyak said. “We do not want to become a low-cost airport.”