BAA’s airports handled a total of 7.5 million
passengers in January 2011, an increase of 3.8% over January 2010.
Domestic traffic grew most strongly in January (up 8.3%), having
been affected more than other markets by snow across the UK in the
same month last year. European scheduled traffic was up by 2.7%
and North Atlantic traffic was 3.2% higher. Other long haul routes
were up by 4.5% overall, including increases of 30% on routes to
China and 10% on Indian services. This was Heathrow’s strongest
January long-haul performance in its history.
Heathrow
recorded an increase of 4.6% to 5.05 million passengers. Roughly
half of this increase is attributed to the bad weather in January
2010, which was also a factor at other UK airports. Stansted was
down by 5.8% on last year, although in its case the underlying reduction is estimated to have been closer to 4.5% because of a
net gain from aircraft diversions in January 2010.
Each of
the Scottish airports and Southampton recorded increases against
January 2010. Edinburgh recorded the largest increase in traffic,
bolstered by new scheduled routes to Europe and North Africa.
At group level the number of air transport movements was
up by 5.9%, with Heathrow 8.9% higher. Air cargo growth remains
strong, with an 8.5% overall increase and a 9.3% gain at Heathrow.
Heathrow’s strong performance on
long-haul routes was supported by important trading connections to
China and India. Furthermore, Heathrow is the UK’s busiest freight
port by value and strong air cargo growth indicates a recovery in
the manufacturing and export sectors.
In Scotland, the
number of passengers using BAA’s three airports is growing, as
services are restored by airlines replacing those operated by Flyglobespan. At Stansted, low-cost airlines continue to reduce
capacity.
Colin Matthews, chief executive of BAA, said, “Passengers want quality service at our airports, from the
beginning to the end of their journeys. The better we collaborate
with airlines and ground handlers, the better the experience will
be for customers both in normal operations and during disruption.
“We are working with all of the companies at Heathrow and
elsewhere to improve passenger experience and make our airports
more resilient, building strong contingency plans. The
underlying performance of our airports is strong, reflecting an
improving economic environment.
“In particular, Heathrow’s
strong performance and our £5 billion investment programme is good
for the British economy and for passengers. In Scotland, we can
see encouraging signs of growth, reflecting investment in new
routes and we are pleased to see traffic at Southampton
increasing.”
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January 2011
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