Emirates Airline President Sir Tim Clark has cautioned that Europe’s delayed rollout of digital border and immigration systems could hinder the smooth flow of air travel across the continent. Speaking on a panel about the future of aviation at the World Government Summit on Wednesday, Clark remarked that European governments were only now moving toward technologies that had long been operational and effective in places like the UAE, the UK, and the United States.
When asked about the European Union’s plans for digital passports and automated border controls, Clark said the initiative was years behind schedule. “This is something they should have implemented long ago,” he noted, emphasizing that the necessary technology has been available and functioning successfully elsewhere for quite some time. He stressed that Europe need only study the progress of more technologically advanced hubs to see what’s already achievable in streamlining travel.
Clark pointed out that while the EU’s drive for a unified digital access system covering both European citizens and international visitors was conceptually sound, the real problem lay in execution rather than innovation. “The model exists. The UK has been doing it, and the Americans have too,” he said, contrasting Europe’s lagging progress with Dubai’s forward-thinking approach.
Citing Dubai as an example, Clark called the emirate’s border control systems a global benchmark. “Here in Dubai, we’ve been operating digital immigration solutions for years and continue to enhance them at speed,” he explained. “Passengers can pass through arrival and departure with hardly any physical checks.”
According to Clark, this shift to fully automated processing dramatically reduces wait times, eliminates long queues, and offers a far smoother travel experience—proof that the technology is ready for wider adoption.
Despite viewing the EU’s digital passport scheme as a positive step, Clark argued that the registration and rollout process has been unnecessarily convoluted. “It’s far too complicated,” he said, adding that current computing capabilities should make implementation straightforward. He urged European airports to accelerate adoption over the next few years, claiming that those who move early will define the new standard for efficiency in global travel.
The discussion also turned to another growing concern in aviation—the increasingly crowded skies shared by both traditional airlines and expanding commercial space operations. Experts at the summit agreed that while innovation in both sectors should continue, it has created new regulatory and logistical challenges.
International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) President Toshiyuki Onuma noted that achieving global consensus on airspace management is becoming more difficult as new nations and private operators enter the field.
According to the panel, the issue isn’t a shortage of technology—advanced systems capable of managing dense airspace already exist—but rather the lack of coordinated international policies. Onuma emphasized that political hesitation and fragmented decision-making remain the biggest barriers to implementing smarter, unified airspace solutions worldwide.