The International Air Transport Association (IATA) has developed the Baggage Community System (BCS), a secure digital platform to support the progressive adoption of the Modern Baggage Messaging (BIX) standard.
BCS will enable airlines, airports, ground handlers, and
solution providers to gain the operational and passenger experience benefits of
BIX even while parts of the industry are in transition from legacy Type B
messages for baggage handling.
“Improving baggage operations depends on timely, accurate,
and secure information exchange. We cannot do that with legacy Type B messages
on teletype networks. And we cannot wait for everyone to convert to modern BIX
capabilities. That is where BCS plays an essential role. By handling both BIX
and legacy Type B systems, it enables early adopters to gain the benefits of
their investments without losing connectivity with those still operating legacy
systems,” said Nick Careen, IATA’s Senior Vice President for Operations,
Safety, and Security.
Fast, accurate, and secure exchange of messages between
airlines, airports, ground handlers, and solution providers are the
backbone/fundamental to improving baggage operations.
BIX messages track bags through key stages of the journey,
including check-in, screening, loading, transfer, and delivery.
However, many are
still exchanged with Type B messages on teletype, limiting data sharing,
increasing costs, and limiting improvements.
BCS is a community platform capable of real-time, structured
data exchange, including between those operating with Type B messages and using
BIX.
This allows legacy and modern systems to continue exchanging
information even as partners modernise at different speeds.
The platform also includes a global directory that enables
users to identify, connect, and exchange messages with partners more easily.
This simplifies a complex and lengthy IT integration process
and accelerates onboarding across the baggage ecosystem.
For passengers, BCS will support more reliable baggage
operations by enabling richer and more accurate baggage data.
Issues such as delayed, mis-directed, or mis-connected bags
will be identified earlier, real-time updates will be available, and solutions
will be faster.
Importantly, adoption of BIX aligns with the overall digitalisation
of operational processes.
The data collected can power better performance analysis and
support more effective service recovery interventions with scanned images and
detailed event histories.
To support adoption, BCS is currently operating a live test
environment where industry partners can validate integrations and messaging
workflows in a controlled setting.
The full platform is
expected to go live in the third quarter of 2026.
Participants already include a broad group of airlines and
airports, including United Airlines, Lufthansa, Emirates, Cathay Pacific,
British Airways, Air Canada, Finnair, and Air New Zealand, as well as airports
such as Berlin Brandenburg, Toronto Pearson, Bengaluru, Münster Osnabrück, and
Red Sea International.
Organisations that demonstrate readiness will be eligible to receive the IATA “BIX Ready” badge to support engagement with their partners. -TradeArabia News Service