International scheduled air traffic results
compiled by IATA for April 2010 show passenger demand slumped by
2.4% as a result of massive flight cancellations centered in
Europe during the six days in April following the eruptions of an
Icelandic volcano. The fall in traffic interrupted the
industry’s recovery from the global financial crisis.
International scheduled cargo traffic, less
impacted by the cancellations, saw the pace of its recovery slow
to 25.2% growth in April (down from the 28.1% improvement recorded
in March).
“The ash crisis knocked back the global recovery
- impacting carriers in all regions. Last month, we were within 1%
of pre-crisis traffic levels in 2008. In April, that was pushed
back to 7%,” said Giovanni Bisignani, IATA’s Director General and
CEO. “European carriers bore the worst of the volcano’s impact.
Their 11.7% drop in passenger traffic could not have come at a
worse time. Europe’s slow recovery from the global financial
crisis and its currency crisis are already a huge burden on the
profitability of its airlines. The uncoordinated and excessive
cancellations and unfairly onerous passenger care requirements
rubbed salt into the European industry’s wounds.”
The April drop in demand in Europe can be
attributed to both the flight cancellations (two-thirds of the
total decline) and follow-on cancellations due to uncertainty of
the availability of air travel (one-third). Early indications for
May show a rebound in travel from the disrupted levels in April.
Looking ahead, Bisignani challenged Europe to
reform its air traffic management. “The ash crisis was an
embarrassing wake-up call for European governments. We need
leadership to deliver the Single European Sky, fair passenger
rights legislation and continent-wide coordination,” said
Bisignani.
The scale of the ash crisis saw global load
factors drop to 76.9% from the 78% recorded in March 2010. Freight
load factors also dipped to 55.3% from the 57.1% recorded in the
previous month. While March traffic was within 1% of pre-crisis
levels for both passenger and cargo, this slipped to 7% for
passenger and 3% for cargo in April.
International
Air Passenger Demand in April 2010
European carriers posted an
11.7% demand drop in April 2010 (compared to a 6.2% increase in March).
Uncertainty of service reliability in the aftermath of the ash
cancellations and major unrest in Greece as a result of the
currency crisis added to the weaker European demand during the
month. Limited GDP growth expectations of 0.9% continue to dampen
demand across the continent.
North American carriers posted a
1.9% decline in demand, primarily as a result of the impact of the
ash crisis on North Atlantic routes. This is a major step
backwards from the 7.8% growth recorded in March. This fall in
demand was less than half the 4.5% cut in capacity, pushing load
factors to 80.2%.
Asia Pacific carriers saw their strong growth
slow to 3.5% (from the 12.9% growth recorded in March). Robust GDP
growth of 7% (Asia excluding Japan) is supporting the strong
recovery.
Middle Eastern airlines recorded the strongest
traffic growth at 13%, which is about half the 25.9% increase of
the previous month.
African carriers also saw their recovery
slow to 8.6% growth in April, down from the 16.9% growth recorded
during the previous month.
Latin American carriers posted a
1.2% increase for the month, a quarter of the 4.6% growth recorded
in March, which was already a weak month as a result of the
Chilean earthquake.
International Air Cargo Demand
in April 2010
Air
freight was also impacted by the ash crisis, although less
dramatically than passenger traffic. The global purchasing
managers’ index rose to its second highest level ever in April,
indicating that the fundamentals of the air freight business were
not impacted by the crisis. We are, however, nearing the end of
the inventory cycle and would expect freight growth to slow down
over the rest of the year.
European carriers showed the
weakest growth at 8.3%, down from the 11.5% growth recorded in
March. Poor economic performance prior to the ash crisis had seen
European airlines lagging behind the rebound experienced by other
regions.
North American carriers recorded a 23.8% increase.
While impressive, this was still below the 29.0% recorded in
March.
Asia Pacific carriers, which make up 46% of
international cargo operations, recorded growth of 33.2%, slightly
below the 35.4% recorded during March.
Middle Eastern carriers
saw their growth rate slow to 25.9% from the 35.5% recorded in
March.
Latin American carriers saw the largest increase in
cargo demand for the second straight month with a 63.0% increase -
an improvement on the 47.9% recorded in March.
African
carriers also showed an improvement, from 51.4% in March to 54.6%
in April.
“The ash crisis was a shock. While there is always a
danger of the consequences of renewed volcanic eruptions, the
impact on passenger confidence should be limited. Unfortunately,
we are trading ash for two additional uncertainties - strikes and
a growing currency crisis - both of which are also focused on
Europe,” said Bisignani. “The labor unrest plaguing Europe
this year is unbelievable. It’s a tough competitive world.
Airlines need to reduce costs to be competitive. Labor must
realize that their pay checks are supported by the performance of
the company. The middle of a very fragile recovery is not the time
for striking. This mentality is divorced from reality.”
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April 2010
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