Weaker
Economic Outlook Puts Drag on Cargo
Growth
Passenger
demand remains robust
(5
December 2007)
Passenger
Traffic
·
International
passenger traffic for October increased 7.7% over the same month in 2006. This
is down slightly from the 8.2% growth recorded in September.
·
Average
international passenger load factors were 76.5% in October, down from the record
levels in the summer but 1.2 percentage points higher than in October
2006.
·
Passenger
traffic growth for airlines in the
·
For
the first 10 months of the year, passenger traffic grew 7.3% indicating that
consumer demand for air travel remains robust in most regions even as some parts
of the global economy, notably the
.
Freight
Traffic
·
Economic
volatility is having a more immediate effect on international air freight
demand. It grew 3.6% in October compared to the same month in 2006. But this is
down from the 5.0% year-on-year growth recorded in September, and partly
reverses the strong pick up of freight growth seen in
mid-2007.
·
Year-to-date
freight demand has risen 4.0%. Leading
air freight indicators such as semi conductor shipments and global manufacturing
business confidence levels have slowed in recent months. Demand for air freight
is still expected to grow, but at a slower pace for the remainder of the
year.
·
Regional
results were varied.
o
o
Asia
Pacific airlines saw a fall in growth rates, from 7% in September to 5.8% in
October, partly due to slower growth in semi-conductor shipments.
o
European
carriers grew 2.0% and
“The
numbers show that the fourth quarter will be challenging. With weakening
confidence levels in manufacturing businesses and slower semi-conductor
shipments we have already seen a slowdown in cargo growth from 5.0% in September
to 3.6% in October,” said Giovanni Bisignani, IATA Director General and CEO.
“Air cargo is still expanding, but the industry has shifted gears to a slower
pace of growth. Passenger demand remains strong, but this is a cyclical
industry. The next months will be critical to see if the impact of the credit
crunch spreads from cargo to corporate and leisure
travel.”
“At
the same time as the credit crunch casts a shadow over global economic
performance, strikes from
View
full October traffic results
-
IATA –
Notes
for editors:
·
IATA
(International Air Transport Association) represents some 240 airlines
comprising 94% of scheduled international air traffic.
·
Explanation
of measurement terms:
o
RPK:
Revenue Passenger Kilometres measures actual passenger traffic
o
ASK:
Available Seat Kilometres measures available passenger capacity
o
PLF:
Passenger Load Factor is % of ASKs used. In comparison of 2007 to 2006, PLF
indicates point differential between the periods compared
o
FTK:
Freight Tonne Kilometres measures actual freight traffic
o
ATK:
Available Tonne Kilometres measures available total capacity (combined passenger
and cargo)
·
IATA
statistics cover international scheduled air traffic; domestic traffic is not
included.
·
All
figures are provisional and represent total reporting at time of publication
plus estimates for missing data.
·
International
passenger traffic market shares by region in terms of RPK are: Europe 34.0%,
Asia Pacific 31.8%, North America 18.8%, Middle East 8.0%, Latin America 3.7%,
·
International
freight traffic market shares by region in terms of FTK are: Asia Pacific 46.1%,
Europe 25.9%, North America 17.2%, Middle East 7.4%, Latin America 2.2%,