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IATA Agm 2026 News Page 5

Roberto Alvo Chairs the IATA Board of Directors

Roberto Alvo Chairs the IATA Board of Directors

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) announced that Roberto Alvo, CEO of LATAM Airlines Group, has taken up duties as Chair of the IATA Board of Directors. His one-year term began at the conclusion of the 82nd IATA Annual General Meeting in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on 8 June 2026. Alvo is the 84th Chair of the IATA Board of Directors on which he has served since 2020. Alvo succeeds Luis Gallego, CEO of International Airlines Group (IAG). Gallego will continue to serve on the Board.

Middle East Disruptions and High Fuel Prices Halve Airline Industry Profitability

Middle East Disruptions and High Fuel Prices Halve Airline Industry Profitability

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) released its latest financial outlook for the global airline industry showing a halving of profitability as a result of war-related Middle East disruptions and high fuel prices. The regional landscape, however, is highly differentiated. At the geographic center of the Middle East war, airlines in the Middle East are expected to collectively fall into the red with weak demand and operational disruptions. All other regions are expected to deliver profits, but at reduced levels from previous projections.

The Americas’ Aviation World Cup Moment

The Americas’ Aviation World Cup Moment

As football’s governing bodies prepare for the largest FIFA World Cup in history, aviation executives gathering in Rio de Janeiro for the IATA Annual General Meeting find themselves confronting a similar question. The Americas have been handed home advantage. The United States, Mexico and Canada will host a tournament expected to attract millions of international visitors, while airlines across the hemisphere are adding capacity, opening routes and positioning themselves for a decade of growth. Yet as any football supporter knows, hosting the tournament does not guarantee lifting the trophy. Talent matters. Infrastructure matters. Execution matters even more.

IATA AGM 2026: Africa and the Middle East Stand at Aviation’s Most Difficult Frontier

IATA AGM 2026: Africa and the Middle East Stand at Aviation’s Most Difficult Frontier

Africa and the Middle East occupy a peculiar place in global aviation. One is home to some of the world’s most powerful connecting hubs, the other remains one of the least connected regions on earth. Yet at this year’s IATA Annual General Meeting in Rio de Janeiro, the two were presented less as separate stories than as adjoining chapters in the same strategic question: where will aviation’s next phase of growth come from, and what will it take to unlock it?

Net Zero at 35,000 Feet: Aviation’s Grand Plan Risks Becoming Trapped in Purgatory

Net Zero at 35,000 Feet: Aviation’s Grand Plan Risks Becoming Trapped in Purgatory

For an industry often accused of moving too slowly on climate change, aviation has spent the better part of a decade doing something remarkable. It has aligned around a single destination. Net zero by 2050 is no longer seriously contested within commercial aviation. Airlines, airports, manufacturers, fuel producers, regulators and governments broadly agree on the objective. The challenge is no longer ambition. The challenge is execution.