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    Aviation leaders tackle industrial and geopolitical headwinds

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    FILE PHOTO: Willie Walsh, Director General, International Air Transport Association (IATA), speaks at the press briefing during the annual International Air Transport Association (IATA) meeting in New Delhi, India, June 2, 2025. REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis/ File Photo · Reuters

    By Julie Zhu and Tim Hepher

    SINGAPORE, Feb 2 (Reuters) – Aviation leaders tackled barriers to growth and the impact ​of geopolitical tensions on the eve of the Singapore ‌Airshow on Monday, while reaffirming pledges to reduce emissions.

    Supply chain problems are ‌hurting global airlines and will remain for some time to come, the head of the International Air Transport Association warned industry leaders and regulators.

    “This disruption continues to have a major impact,” IATA ⁠Director General Willie ‌Walsh said at the Changi Aviation Summit, ahead of Asia’s largest air show.

    The aviation industry is ‍also navigating geopolitical changes including U.S. import tariffs that have upended flows of air freight.

    “I think the impact of geopolitical change was much ​more obvious on the air cargo side of the business ‌than on the passenger side,” Walsh said.

    Air cargo shipments between Asia and North America slipped 0.8% last year in the first such decline for some time, while volumes between Europe and Asia increased by 10.3%, he added.

    The Asia-Pacific region is ⁠the world’s fastest-growing region for air ​travel, propelled by China and India, ​with passenger traffic growth of 7.3% projected for 2026.

    Toshiyuki Onuma, president of the governing council of the International ‍Civil Aviation ⁠Organization, the United Nations’ aviation body, warned aviation would struggle to keep up with projected growth without coordinated action.

    “A ⁠system built for 4 billion passengers cannot support three times that number ‌without transformation,” he said.

    (Reporting by Julie Zhu and Tim ‌Hepher; Editing by Jamie Freed)

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