Cathay Pacific’s and Dragonair’s traffic figures
for April 2011 show a year-on-year rise in passenger numbers
alongside a drop in the passenger load factor, and a decrease in
the amount of cargo and mail carried.
Cathay Pacific and Dragonair carried a total of
2,258,004 passengers in April 2011 – up 4.1% on the same month
last year – while the passenger load factor was down 3.6
percentage points to 80.3%. Capacity for the month, measured in
available seat kilometres (ASKs), was up by 11.6%. For the year to
date, the number of passengers carried is up by 1.7% compared to a
capacity rise of 10.1%.
Cathay Pacific General Manager Revenue
Management Tom Owen said, “Demand on North American and Southeast
Asian routes remained strong, and regional demand from Hong Kong
was given a boost by the Easter holidays. The China network was
solid, improving the quality of revenues on Dragonair, while
Europe rebounded off the low base last year resulting from the
airspace closures. Premium demand continued to be generally firm,
benefitting from the Canton Fair. The continued slump on Japan
routes remains a concern, with few signs yet of material pick-up.”
The two airlines carried 139,944 tonnes of cargo and mail
last month, an 8.4% decrease compared to the same month last year,
while the cargo and mail load factor was down 11.0 percentage
points to 68.3%. Capacity, measured in available cargo/mail tonne
kilometres, was up by 13.4%, while cargo and mail tonne kilometres
flown were down by 2.3%. For the year so far, tonnage has dropped
by 0.3% compared to a capacity increase of 19.4%.
Cathay Pacific General Manager Cargo Sales &
Marketing James Woodrow said, “Our key Hong Kong home market
remained soft throughout April while demand out of the major
manufacturing areas of China weakened further, particularly to
Europe. However, once again the outbound weakness was offset to
some extent by fairly robust demand into Asia. We reduced our
freighter services on long- haul trunk routes in line with demand
last month and will do the same in May as the markets stay quiet.”
See recent travel news from:
Travel News Asia,
Cathay Pacific,
Hong Kong,
April 2011
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