According to data compiled by IATA, global
airline traffic results for March 2012 show total passenger demand
rose 7.6% and freight demand climbed 0.3% compared to the same
month last year.
Comparisons with March last year are affected by
events that depressed passenger demand in 2011, including the
issues in parts of the Middle East, which disrupted travel in the
Middle East and North Africa beginning in February 2011 and the
earthquake and tsunami in Japan in March 2011 that impacted air
travel across the Asia Pacific region.
IATA estimates that the year-on-year rise
in air travel in March was about two percentage points higher than
it would otherwise have been in the absence of these events.
Cargo demand, meanwhile, was affected by the
timing of the Chinese New Year, which occurred in January this
year - leading to stronger February shipments - but took place in
February 2011 - leading to stronger March 2011 shipments and
weaker year-on-year comparisons. Compared to February 2012, March
air cargo demand was significantly stronger by 2.2%.
“If we discount the industry’s growth by two
percentage points as a result of the extraordinary events in 2011,
airlines still managed an expansion in the range of 5-6%. Given
the prevailing economic conditions with some European states
returning to recession, passenger demand is holding up well. But
this is bringing little relief to the bottom line because yields
are not keeping pace with the continued very high price of oil,”
said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO.
Oil prices have remained stubbornly above
$100/barrel (Brent crude) for the past 14 months. In 2008, oil
prices rose from $90/barrel in January to a peak of $147/barrel in
late July. But by November, they had fallen back to less than
$50/barrel.
“We have not seen such sustained high oil prices
previously. Jet fuel prices have risen 8% since January.
Considering that fuel now accounts for 34% of average operating
costs, it’s an increase that hurts,” said Tyler.
Total passenger capacity rose 4.4% compared to
March 2011, resulting in a load factor of 78.3%, up 2.4 percentage
points over the year-ago period. Freight capacity, however,
climbed 1.7% year-on-year, above the rate of demand, placing
pressure on load factors.
International Passenger
Markets
International air travel rose 9.6% in March
compared to the year-ago period, while capacity climbed 5%,
resulting in a load factor of 77.7%, up 3.2 percentage points from
March 2011.
European airlines recorded the strongest traffic
growth among the major regions despite deepening recessions in
parts of the continent, with demand up 8.8% year-on-year, on a
4.1% increase in capacity. Load factor rose to 78.5%. This growth
is partly the result of expanding European exports to stronger
Asian economies and the associated business travel.
Asia Pacific airlines also experienced healthy
growth, with demand up 8.1% on a 4.3% rise in capacity, pushing
load factors up to 76.5%. Year-to-year comparisons were impacted
by the March 2011 Japan earthquake and tsunami, which are
estimated to have reduced 2011 demand by 3%, exaggerating
year-over-year growth by a like amount.
North American airlines had a 5.3% rise in
passenger traffic, a solid performance for the region and
concurrent with better economic results from the US, particularly
with increasing consumer confidence. Capacity rose at a much
slower rate than demand, by 0.9%, pushing load factors up
fractionally to 80.3%, the highest of all the regions. Very tight
capacity control in this region is allowing airlines to boost
asset utilization, helping to offset part of the rise in fuel
costs.
Middle East airlines’ demand jumped 20.9% on a
12.4% rise in capacity, propelling load factors to 78.7%. This was
the largest rate of growth for any region but mostly reflects the
weakness of travel last year following the Arab Spring. IATA
estimates this inflated traffic gains by seven percentage points.
Latin American carriers experienced the
second-slowest demand growth among the regions, but traffic still
rose 7.7% year-over-year on a 6.7% rise in capacity. Passenger
load factor was 77.9%. It is among the regions least impacted by
the distortions in 2011 and this latest expansion reflects a
continuation of the steady growth seen since early 2009.
African airlines reported a 14.3% rise in traffic, of which an
estimated 11 percentage points was attributed to traffic
suppression in March 2011 owing to the trouble in certain parts of
the Middle East and Africa. Capacity rose
10.7%, resulting in a load factor of 64.8%, which although an
improvement year-over-year, was by far the lowest among the
regions.
Domestic Passenger Markets
Domestic
markets grew at less than half the rate of international markets,
just 4.5%, in part owing to the timing of Carnival in Brazil but
also owing to slower growth in India.
Japan
experienced the strongest traffic growth, up 15.5% year-on-year.
This, however, reflects the devastating impact on year-go traffic
of the natural disasters of March 2011. March 2011 traffic was
down 27% on March 2010 and the performance would have been worse
had the earthquake struck earlier in the month. While the market
has significantly recovered, domestic traffic levels remain 10%
below those of the pre-crisis period. In fact, since the end of
last year, domestic travel has started to retreat. Capacity was
2.6% below previous-year levels and the load factor was 64.8%, the
lowest of any domestic market.
China’s domestic
traffic continued on its strong growth path with an expansion of
10.1% but this was exceeded by an 11.8% rise in capacity, with
load factors slipping to 80.5%.
US March
domestic traffic rose 1%, but capacity contracted 0.7%, pushing
load factors to 84.3%, the highest for any market.
Airline traffic in Brazil was affected by the timing of
Carnival, which occurred in February 2012, a month earlier than in
2011. March 2012 traffic growth of 2.9% is estimated to be about
half what it would have been absent the distortion. Capacity rose
9.2%, pushing the load factor down to 65.2%.
India traffic rose 4% year-over-year, much slower than the last
few months, reflecting the wider economic slowdown, while capacity
climbed 4.8% and load factor was 72.2%.
Air Freight (Domestic and International)
Air
freight markets are now showing signs of renewed expansion.
Freight Tonne Kilometers (FTKs) were over 4% higher in March than
they were in the fourth quarter of 2011. However, compared with
March last year the size of the market was up just 0.3%. This is
because the Chinese New Year occurred in February 2011, resulting
in strong March 2011 shipments as factories reopened following the
holiday period.
Asia Pacific and European airlines saw
their freight traffic decline 3.1% and 1.9%, respectively,
compared to a year ago.
Middle Eastern carriers had a
15.1% rise in demand, the healthiest performance among the
regions, with about four percentage points of that rise
attributable to Arab Spring-related traffic suppression last year.
Latin American carriers’ traffic climbed 4.9%, while African
carriers saw a 3.9% rise compared to the year-ago period. North
American airlines’ demand rose 1.6% year-on-year.
Conclusion
Both Spain and the UK have
slipped into a double dip recession in recent weeks. From April
this year, the UK hiked its Air Passenger Duty (already the most
expensive aviation tax in the world) by 8% which is double the
inflation rate. Spain, with an economy highly dependent on
tourism, is contemplating a 50% increase in charges at its two
main airports (Barcelona and Madrid).
“The goose that lays
the golden eggs can only take so many knocks before she fails to
produce. Even in the best of times, increasing the cost of
connectivity dents competitiveness. When the economy is weak it
puts at risk aviation’s ability to create jobs and growth. And in
a recession it is economic nonsense,” said Tyler.
Aviation
supports 56.6 million jobs and $2.2 trillion of economic activity
according to the latest figures from Oxford Economics.
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March 2012
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