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Passengers can track luggage to the carousel with smartphone

Marketplace Contributor Nov 22, 2016
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Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport is the headquarters for Delta Air Lines. At its baggage claim area, banners say bags are guaranteed to be delivered within 20 minutes. Tasnim Shamma/WABE

Passengers can track luggage to the carousel with smartphone

Marketplace Contributor Nov 22, 2016
Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport is the headquarters for Delta Air Lines. At its baggage claim area, banners say bags are guaranteed to be delivered within 20 minutes. Tasnim Shamma/WABE
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Your luggage tag may look like an ordinary paper tag, but if you’re flying with Delta Air Lines, it now has a microchip embedded inside. Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines is spending millions on new technology that allows its passengers to track their bags using a smartphone.

At Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, the home base of Delta Air Lines, Cynthia Tookes of Lithonia, Georgia, who flies once a week to sing with her church choir, said she loves the new feature that allows her to track her bags on the Fly Delta app.

“You press the icon and it shows that my bags were delivered to Claim Area eight,” Tookes said. “I went right to eight, had no problem finding my bag, it was right there.”

Cynthia Tookes of Lithonia, Georgia flies with Delta Air Lines nearly every week to sing with her church choir. She shows off how she uses the new features to track her bag on the Fly Delta mobile app.

Cynthia Tookes of Lithonia, Georgia flies with Delta Air Lines nearly every week to sing with her church choir. She shows off how she uses the new features to track her bag on the Fly Delta mobile app. 

Delta Air Lines is the first to roll out RFID, or Radio Frequency Identification tags, at all of its destinations worldwide. The tiny microchips in each tag give off radio waves that help Delta track exactly where your bag is. It’s also using RFID-enabled belt loaders, which will eliminate the need for Delta employees to manually scan each bag. A light will flash green when the right bag is being loaded onto a plane and red light if a bag is about to load the wrong plane.

Jim Peters is Chief Technology Officer for the global airline industry group SITA.

“We were actually formed in 1949 to put in telephone lines between the airports and airlines so that every airline didn’t have to go to every country where they flew and get phone lines installed,” Peters said. “Since then we’ve evolved from just regular telephones to data networks and shared counter technology.”

In a joint study with the International Air Transport Association, SITA estimates airlines could save $3 billion over the next seven years by using RFID tags and belt loaders. “The technology allows you to get better tracking than the paper-based barcodes, because if the piece of paper gets mushed up or is under the bag or gets ripped, the systems can’t scan it as well it could scan an electronic tag like RFID,” Peters said.

SITA’s study estimated airlines lose about 6.5 bags for every 1,000 passengers. By 2018, airline executives anticipate tracking every bag during its entire journey. Currently, bags are scanned during check-in and at transfer points, but not when it arrives at its final destination.

Airline analyst Ashley Nunes said it’s costly for airlines to dedicate resources and time to finding and returning mishandled bags.  

“Airlines generally don’t tend to lose a lot of bags, but when they do, passengers tend to remember it,” Nunes said.

Khalil Chung is one passenger who said he remembers clearly when other airlines have lost his bag.

“After that, then I kind of switched to Delta,” Chung said. He had just landed in Atlanta with his mom on a Delta flight from Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Khalil Chung of Atlanta said he is a loyal Delta Air Lines customer after he lost his bags with other airlines. On a recent flight, he discovered his mother’s suitcase was missing and downloaded the app to locate the bag. The app said it was at Hartsfield

Khalil Chung of Atlanta said he is a loyal Delta Air Lines customer after he lost his bags with other airlines. On a recent flight, he discovered his mother’s suitcase was missing and downloaded the app to locate the bag. The app said it was at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, but he was unable to find it. 

But about an hour after he landed, Chung found out his mom’s black suitcase was missing. Using the new Delta technology, he downloaded the app to find out where it was.  

“It says that it was delivered at Area 3 and it boarded the plane from Fort Lauderdale to Atlanta; however, it’s not here,” Chung said.

His mother’s suitcase never did show up. Delta said it’s still working to find the bag. 

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