Visitors from China arrive at Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Paranaque, Metro Manila, Philippines on Jan 24, 2023. (PHOTO / AFP)

LONDON – Global airline traffic recovered to 68.5 percent of pre-pandemic levels last year and surged 64.4 percent from 2021, according to figures published by global aviation body IATA on Monday.

Airlines lost tens of billions of dollars in 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and saw the first signs of relief as travel started to return in 2022, particularly during the summer months.

European carriers saw full-year traffic jump 132.2 percent compared to 2021, while North American airlines saw a 130.2 percent rise year-on-year, according to IATA data

With China's recent reopening, that recovery is set to go on, the head of IATA said.

"This momentum is expected to continue in the new year, despite some governments' overreactions to China's reopening," said Willie Walsh, IATA's director-general.

ALSO READ: IATA calls for governments to end travel restrictions for China

China previously said it would resume overseas group tours organized by tour agencies and online travel companies for Chinese citizens starting from Monday.

European carriers saw full-year traffic jump 132.2 percent compared to 2021, while North American airlines saw a 130.2 percent rise year-on-year, according to the data.

But analysts and executives have long said that recovery to full pre-pandemic levels depends on how quickly travel to and from China can bounce back.

"It is vital that governments learn the lesson that travel restrictions and border closures have little positive impact in terms of slowing the spread of infectious diseases in our globally inter-connected world," Walsh added.

Tentative recovery

Current schedules show there could still be substantially fewer flights between Asia and Europe in 2023 compared to 2019, data from Cirium showed, but more routes are being announced.

Some airline groups have said they would reopen some routes to China in the coming months.

READ MORE: China's outbound tourism gains momentum

Air France-KLM said earlier this month it would start running daily flights to Hong Kong, Shanghai and Beijing starting in July while British Airways said it would start flights between London and Shanghai from April 23.