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Passenger Traffic Continues to Rise
Cargo Remains in
Doldrums
Geneva - The International Air Transport Association
(IATA) announced global traffic results for January showing a 5.7% rise
in passenger demand but an 8.0% decline in air freight compared to the
same month in 2011. The occurrence of Chinese New Year in January (rather
than in February as in 2011) exaggerated the increase in passenger demand
and the fall in air freight. Stripping this out, the underlying trend was
for stronger passenger growth, while stabilized weakness in cargo markets
continues.
"The year started with some hopeful news on business
confidence. It appears that freight markets have stabilized, albeit at
weak levels. And this is having a positive impact on business-related
travel. However, airlines face two big risks: rising oil prices and Europe's
sovereign debt crisis. Both are hanging over the industry's fortunes like
the sword of Damocles," said IATA's Director General and CEO Tony Tyler.
Total January passenger demand rose 5.7% compared to
January 2011 a slight acceleration from the 5.6% year over year increase
recorded for December 2011. With January passenger capacity up 4.2%,
average load factor rose 1.1 percentage points to 76.6% compared to the
same month a year ago.
Freight markets stood at 8% below
January 2011 levels. The decline in air freight stabilized in the fourth
quarter of 2011, at levels 4% below the 2008 pre-crisis peak. There was a
2.5% fall in global freight markets from December to January, but this is
almost totally attributable to the impact of factory closures due to the
Chinese New Year. Freight capacity contracted by 0.6% year over year, and
freight load factor fell to 41% (from 44.3% in January 2011) as
deliveries of new widebody passenger aircraft offset measures to reduce
freight capacity.
|
Jan 2012 vs. Jan 2011 |
RPK Growth |
ASK Growth |
PLF |
FTK Growth |
AFTK Growth |
|
International
|
5.5% |
4.2% |
76.6 |
-8.1% |
-0.6% |
|
Domestic |
6.1% |
4.1% |
76.6 |
-7.0% |
-0.5% |
|
Total Market |
5.7% |
4.2% |
76.6 |
-8.0% |
-0.6% |
|
2011 vs. 2010 |
RPK Growth |
ASK Growth |
PLF |
FTK Growth |
AFTK Growth |
|
International
|
6.9% |
8.2% |
77.4 |
-0.5% |
5.2% |
|
Domestic |
4.3% |
3.2% |
79.3 |
-1.7% |
0.2% |
|
Total Market |
5.9% |
6.3% |
78.1 |
-0.6% |
4.1% |
International Passenger Markets
International air travel rose 5.5% in January year over
year, while capacity climbed 4.2%, resulting in a load factor of 76.6%,
up from 75.7% in January 2011.
- Asia-Pacific
airlines saw their traffic rise 6% in January compared
to 2011. Capacity climbed 6.4% and load factor dipped slightly to
77.5%. Year on year traffic growth would have been softer were it
not for the Chinese New Year boost.
- European
carriers experienced a 5.3% gain in traffic versus
January 2011. The persisting economic weakness of the region
resulted in a considerable drop from the 9.5% growth recorded in
December despite the attractiveness of the weak Euro to tourist
traffic and export activity. The average load factor strengthened to
75.7% on a 2.7% rise in capacity year over year; however, the load
factor is among the lowest of the regions.
- North
American airlines had a 0.3% dip in passenger
traffic, but capacity dropped 0.9%, pushing load factor up
fractionally to 77.6%. Next to African carriers, the passenger
demand was the weakest performance.
- Middle East
airlines recorded double-digit traffic growth in
January, posting a 14.5% increase. This was by far the largest rate
of growth for any region and represents a return to the rates
experienced in 2010. Capacity rose 10.6%. Load factor climbed 2.7
points to 78.5%, among the highest of the regions.
- Latin
American carriers continued to enjoy robust
passenger demand. Traffic rose 7.9% in January compared to the same
month last year, while capacity increased 7.4%. At 79.9%, the
region's carriers had the strongest load factor.
- African
airlines reported a 3.6% decline in demand and a 0.8%
decline in capacity, with a load factor of 64.8%, the lowest load
factor among the regions. Although sub-Saharan economies are showing
strong economic growth, African airlines are finding it difficult to
capitalize on the trend.
Domestic Passenger Markets
Domestic markets outperformed international markets in
aggregate as strong demand in Brazil, China and India helped to push domestic
traffic up 6.1% compared to January 2011.
- The impact
of Chinese New Year-related traffic was evidenced in China's
domestic market, which surged 16.8% year over year on a 14.3% lift
in capacity, pushing load factor to 80.8%, the highest recorded for
domestic traffic. On a seasonally adjusted basis, traffic rose 3.2%
compared to December. The Chinese market now accounts for more than
21% of the total global domestic market.
- US January
domestic traffic was nearly flat at 0.2%, but capacity contracted
1.5%, pushing load factor to 78.1%.
- Japan's traffic
was 8.9% below previous year levels, slightly more than the 8.3%
contraction in capacity. Year to year comparisons are affected by
the impact of the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami as well as
industry restructuring.
- Brazil's airlines
saw a 10.5% rise in demand while capacity climbed 14.8%. Load
factor was 74.9%, down 2.9 points from January 2011.
- India traffic
rose 8.8% year over year, while capacity expanded 12.8% and load
factor was 74.9%. Demand rose 0.9% compared to December.
Air Freight (Domestic and International)
- The decline
in air freight markets ended in the 2011 fourth quarter. The
January contraction largely was owing to the Chinese New Year and
resulted in international demand falling 8.1% while domestic markets
dropped 7%.
- Asia-Pacific
and
European
airlines bore the brunt of the international
decline, down 14% and 9.6% respectively compared to January 2011. In
addition to the impact of the holiday, the peripheral economies in
Europe have been in recession and attracting little inbound freight.
Until recently this had been offset by strong outbound traffic flows
from Northern European economies.
- Middle
Eastern carriers enjoyed a 9.4% rise in demand, the
healthiest performance among the regions. North American airlines' demand
dropped 4.0%. Latin
American carriers' traffic climbed 2.2% while African carriers saw
a 3.7% decline compared to the year-ago period.
The Bottom Line
"Running an airline in today's uncertain economic climate
is a tough job. Some well-known names-Spanair and Malev-disappeared in
January. At the same time, we know that demand for air travel will grow
as the global economy recovers and requires even greater connectivity.
The billions of dollars in commercial orders placed at the recent
Singapore Airshow demonstrate that airlines are strategically investing
to meet that demand with ever-more fuel efficient and
environmentally-sustainable aircraft," said Tyler.
"The aviation industry is a catalyst for economic growth. Governments
should keep this in mind in their policy initiatives. Measures to boost
competitiveness-not taxes or restrictions-are immediately needed, along
with a long-term vision to support sustainable economic growth through
much needed infrastructure investments. This includes the Single European
Sky, the Federal Aviation Administration's NextGen, Seamless Asian Skies
and airport development. Of course, this must be accompanied with polices
to improve environmental performance-the commercialization of sustainable
biofuels and a global framework for economic measures to manage
aviation's emissions through the International Civil Aviation
Organization included. Such a holistic policy approach will keep
communities sustainably connected to global economic opportunities," said
Tyler.
View January traffic results
- IATA -
For more information, please contact:
Corporate Communications
Tel: +41 22 770 2967
Email: corpcomms@iata.org
Notes for Editors:
- IATA
(International Air Transport Association) represents some 240
airlines comprising 84% of global air traffic.
- You can
follow us at http://twitter.com/iata2press for
news specially catered for the media.
- Domestic
Markets: Domestic RPKs account for about 37.0% of the
total market. It is most important for North American airlines as it
is about 66.5% of their operations. In Latin America, domestic
travel accounts for 47.3% of operations, primarily owing to the
large Brazilian market. For Asia-Pacific carriers, the large markets
in India, China and Japan mean that domestic travel accounts for
42.2% of the region's operations. It is less important for Europe
and most of Africa where domestic travel represents just 11.0% and
11.6% of operations respectively. And it is negligible for Middle
Eastern carriers for whom domestic travel represents just 5.5% of
operations.
- Explanation
of measurement terms:
- RPK:
Revenue Passenger Kilometers measures actual passenger traffic
- ASK:
Available Seat Kilometers measures available passenger capacity
- PLF: Passenger
Load Factor is % of ASKs used.
- FTK:
Freight Tonne Kilometers measures actual freight traffic
- AFTK:
Available Freight Tonne Kilometers measures available total freight
capacity
- FLF:
Freight Load Factor is % of AFTKs used
- IATA
statistics cover international and domestic scheduled air traffic
for IATA member and non-member airlines.
- All figures
are provisional and represent total reporting at time of publication
plus estimates for missing data. Historic figures may be
revised.
- Total
passenger traffic market shares by region of carriers in terms of
RPK are: Europe 25.6%, Asia-Pacific 31.9%, North America 25.3%,
Middle East 8.3%, Latin America 6.5%, Africa 2.4%.
- Total
freight traffic market shares by region of carriers in terms of FTK
are: Asia-Pacific 39.2%, Europe 20.9%, North America 24.5%, Middle
East 11.1%, Latin America 3.2%, Africa 1.1%.
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