IATA’s global traffic results for February 2012
show an 8.6% improvement in passenger demand and a 5.2% rise in
cargo demand compared to the same month in the previous year.
Several factors inflated February 2012
results and distorted comparisons with the year-ago period. These
included weaker traffic during the trouble in some parts of the
Middle East a year ago, and the occurrence of Carnival in Brazil
in February, a month earlier than in 2011.
Cargo demand was also subject to positive
distortion by the occurrence of Chinese New Year in January which
pushed some deliveries into February. When comparing to January
2012 levels, the picture becomes much more moderate, with
passenger demand growing by 0.4% and cargo demand declining by
1.2%.
Global passenger capacity expanded by 7.4%
compared to previous-year levels, lagging behind the 8.6% increase
in demand. This has had a positive impact on load factors, which
airlines have maintained at 75.3% - better than the 74.4% recorded
in February 2011.
Freight demand continued to be
relatively stable. This trend started to develop in September 2011
and is consistent with improvements in business confidence.
“The outlook is fragile. Improvements in business
confidence slowed in February. This will limit the potential for
business class travel growth and it implies that an uptick for
cargo is not imminent. At the same time, airlines trying to recoup
rising fuel costs could risk reduced volumes on price sensitive
market segments. Weak economic conditions and rising fuel costs
are a double-whammy that an industry anticipating a 0.5% margin
can ill-afford,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO.
International Passenger Markets
International air travel stood 9.3% above February 2011 levels.
Capacity expanded by 7.3% and load factors stood at 74.4%. It should be noted that except for Asia Pacific, all regions saw
demand expand ahead of capacity when compared to February 2011.
Asia Pacific carriers saw a 5.9% increase in demand
with a 6.2% increase in capacity. Load factors stood at 75.4%.
Following a small spike in international travel over the Chinese
New Year period in January (6.4% growth) February traffic
declined.
European carriers saw a 7.6% increase in
international demand, well ahead of the 5.0% increase in capacity.
This growth occurred despite the continuing sovereign debt crisis
and weakened consumer confidence. Load factors stood at 74.4%, up
significantly from the 72.6% recorded for February 2011.
North American carriers showed the weakest growth in demand at
4.9%, which was still ahead of 4.3% growth in capacity over the
previous year. The average load factor was the lowest among the
major regions at 72.1%. While this performance was weak in
comparison to other regions, it was significantly better than
January, when international demand contracted by 0.3%. This improvement follows strengthened consumer confidence and economic
conditions.
Middle East carriers posted 23.4%
international growth which is distorted by the poor performance in
February 2011 owing to the impact of what some call Arab Spring. Capacity
growth stood at 16.1%. Average load factors for the region showed
the most dramatic improvement to 76.9% in February 2012 compared
to 72.4% in the previous year. Stripping out the distortions, we
estimate that the region has now fully recovered.
African
carriers also saw a positively distorted performance in February
due to the Arab Spring with 24.7% growth in demand and 20.2%
growth in capacity. The first impacts of the Arab Spring were felt
in the Northern Africa region - primarily Egypt and Tunisia. Load
factors for the region stood at 62.7%. Although this was the
lowest among all the regions, it was significantly better than the
60.5% for February 2011. Our estimate is that African carriers
have fully recovered from the traffic losses resulting from the
Arab Spring.
Latin American airlines posted a 13.3%
increase in demand against a 10.8% increase in capacity. Load
factors stood at 78.3%, the highest among the regions and well
ahead of the 76.6% achieved for February 2011. Carriers in the
region benefitted most from the traffic spike on Brazil routes
associated with Carnival.
Domestic Passenger
Markets
Overall domestic demand expanded by 7.6%,
only slightly ahead of the 7.5% increase in capacity. Average load
factor was 76.7%, which was higher than the 74.4% achieved on
international routes.
Brazil experienced the
fastest growth in February compared to the previous year. Demand
was up by 17.9%, but lagged behind the 20.9% increase in capacity.
Load factors stood at 66.5%, the weakest with the exception of
Japan.
India experienced the second strongest growth
among the major domestic markets at 12.3%. This lagged behind the
16.3% increase in capacity over previous-year levels. Nonetheless,
India’s carriers filled 75.4% of seats. The strong traffic growth masks financial weakness resulting from high operating costs and
taxation.
China’s domestic market stood at 10.1% above
previous-year levels. This is significantly down from the 17.3%
growth in January owing to strong Chinese New Year traffic. Load
factors were the highest among domestic markets at 79.3%.
The US domestic market saw considerably improved performance in
February with 5.2% demand growth. After keeping capacity flat for
several months, demand improvements were met with a 4.4% increase
in capacity. Load factors strengthened to 78.8%.
Japanese
domestic performance continues to suffer from the impact of last
year’s earthquake and tsunami combined with a tightening of
capacity due to industry restructuring. Demand was 8.8% below
previous-year levels while capacity stood at -6.0%. Load factors
were the weakest among the major domestic markets at 61.4%.
Air Freight (Domestic and International)
Air
freight volumes increased in February from a year ago by 5.2%.
This was largely as a result of cargo shipments that were postponed in January due to the Chinese New Year holiday and the
comparison to the previous year which was impacted by weak demand
associated with issues in some parts of the Middle East. Air freight volumes showed a
decline on January’s performance of 1.2%.
Cargo growth
was led by Middle East carriers with an 18.2% increase in demand
which was matched exactly with an 18.2% increase in capacity. The
largest volume contributor to February’s growth, however, was the
Asia Pacific region which posted a 10.2% year-on-year gain.
European and North American carriers saw year-on-year
declines in cargo traffic of 1.4% and 0.3% respectively. Latin
American airlines saw the most significant decline with a 3.6%
fall compared to previous-year levels.
African carriers
posted growth of 3.2%% over the previous year demand levels but on
very small volumes.
Conclusion
“We are ending the first quarter with a considerable amount of
uncertainty. While the threat of a European financial meltdown seems more remote than it did only a few months ago, the political
risks that aviation faces are growing. The rapid increase in the
price of oil is already biting hard. The UK is increasing the
onerous Air Passenger Duty. Europe is adding to the burden with the inclusion of international aviation in its emissions trading
scheme - the extra-territorial aspects of which are creating the possibility of a trade war that nobody can afford. The exact
conditions vary from country to country, but around the world we see ill-conceived policy initiatives that over-regulate,
excessively tax or otherwise restrain the aviation industry. This
prevents it from being the catalyst for economic growth that it
can be,” said Tyler.
The latest study by Oxford
Economics on the global benefits of aviation calculates that the
industry supports 56.6 million jobs and enables $2.2 trillion of
economic activity. With 35% of the value of goods traded
internationally travelling by air, the connectivity provided by
air transport is one of the key enablers of global business.
“Aviation has transformed the world into a global
village. We did this even while making profit margins of less than
1% in a policy framework best described as ‘tax-and-restrict’ in
many markets. Aviation could achieve much more with competitiveness-enabling policies that support sustainable
growth,” Tyler concluded.
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February 2012
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