Preliminary traffic figures for the month of
September 2011 show sustained growth in international air
passenger traffic, whilst international air freight markets
continued to soften.
According to figures from the Association of
Asia Pacific Airlines (AAPA), Asia Pacific based airlines flew a
total of 16 million international passengers in September 2011, a
growth of 5.4% compared to the same month last year, underpinned
by business and leisure demand on Asian routes.
Measured in
revenue passenger kilometre terms (RPK), international passenger
traffic grew by 5.2%. With available seat capacity expanding by
6.8%, the average international passenger load factor fell 1.1
percentage points to 77.3%.
As a result of a slowdown in trade activities,
Asia Pacific international air cargo demand, in freight tonne
kilometre (FTK) terms, declined by 6.5% compared to the same month
last year. Offered freight capacity contracted by 1.3%, resulting
in a 3.5 percentage point decline in the average international air
cargo load factor for the region’s carriers to 63.8% for the
month.
“Overall, for the first three
quarters of the year, Asia Pacific airlines saw a 3.7% increase in
the number of international passengers carried, whereas
international air cargo demand fell by 4.1%,” said Mr. Andrew
Herdman, AAPA Director General. “Resilient Asian economies, with relatively
strong domestic spending power, helped support leisure and
business travel markets. However, a slowdown in export demand, as
a result of the ongoing European economic crisis and softening
North American economies, contributed to the fall in overall cargo
traffic. As a result, Asian airlines have seen only modest revenue
growth this year. At the same time, airlines have had to grapple
with a 40% increase in jet fuel prices, squeezing what are
typically already very thin margins.”
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AAPA,
September 2011
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