David Fickling, Columnist

Emirates Is Grounded, and Global Aviation With It

Almost all carriers will struggle with the impact of the coronavirus, but the Dubai-based airline had some serious weaknesses going in. 

This won't fly.

Photographer: Jason Alden/Bloomberg
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Much as Pan Am Corp. was an emblem of the first wave of global aviation, Emirates has dominated the world airline industry for a generation. Its announcement that almost all passenger flights will be suspended from Wednesday marks the death knell of that era.

The Dubai-based carrier is the largest airline by international passenger traffic, with the capacity to move its customers 391 billion seat-kilometers last year. In terms of cross-border traffic, that’s twice the capacity of any U.S. airline and about a seventh more than the three European carriers that are its closest international competitors in terms of scale.