Scheduled international traffic for February
2011 increased 6% and 2.3% respectively for passenger and cargo
demand compared to February 2010 according to data from IATA.
February demand growth was down significantly
from the revised 8.4% and 8.7% expansion recorded in January for
passenger and cargo traffic respectively. The political unrest in
the Middle East and North Africa during February is estimated to
have cut international traffic by about 1%.
In addition to the political unrest in the Middle
East and North Africa, the more dramatic fall in cargo growth
(from 8.7% in January 2011 to 2.3% in February) was impacted in
part by factory shutdowns due to the Chinese New Year period which
fell in the first part of February in 2011.
Another
series of shocks is denting the industrys recovery from the
recession. As the unrest in Egypt and Tunisia spreads across the Middle East and North Africa, demand growth across the region is
taking a step back. The tragic earthquake and its aftermath in
Japan will most certainly see a further dampening of demand from
March. The industry fundamentals are good. But extraordinary
circumstances have made the first quarter of 2011 very difficult,
said Giovanni Bisignani, IATAs Director General and CEO.
February marked a decline in load factors in both the cargo and
the passenger business. February passenger load factors stood at
73%. On a seasonally adjusted basis they have lost 2.2
percentage points on peak levels as capacity additions have
consistently exceeded demand growth. Freight load factors have
deteriorated even faster to 51.6%. This is 4 percentage points
below their peak in May 2010, on a seasonally adjusted basis.
International Passenger Traffic
By February 2011, air
travel volumes were 16% higher compared to the low point reached
in early 2009 and some 5% above the pre- recession peak of early
2008.
Europes carriers recorded 7.4% growth compared to
February 2010 against a 9.8% increase in capacity. This was slower
than the 7.9% demand growth reported for January showing the
impact of fall off in trans-Mediterranean traffic to North Africa
due to the unrest in the region.
North American airlines
reported 6.7% year-on-year growth for February and a capacity
expansion of 11.9%. In recent months, the regions airlines have
seen dampened demand due to several factors starting with
disruptive winter conditions in December and January, followed by
political unrest last month in the Middle East and North Africa.
As a result, there is a widening gap between supply and demand
pushing the load factor down to 71.7%, significantly below the
82.2% recorded for the full year in 2010.
Asia Pacific
airlines reported a major slowdown to 3% growth, half of the
6.3% recorded for January. A capacity increase of 6.6% pushed the
load factor down to 75.4%. Chinese New Year fell at the beginning
of February, pushing some of the holiday traffic into late January.
Middle East airlines saw demand growth fall from 12.0%
in January to 8.4% in February. A capacity increase of 11%
resulted in a load factor of 72.2%. Political unrest in Bahrain,
Yemen and Syria is expected to have an impact on the regions
markets in March. These three countries represent about 6% of
Middle Eastern traffic and 0.3% of global capacity.
Africa saw
traffic fall by 1.3% compared to February 2010. Against a capacity
expansion of 6.9%, load factors fell to 60.4%. Egypt and Tunisia
account for 18% of the African market and 0.6% of worldwide
capacity. Libya is a further 3% of the African market and 0.1% of global capacity. The impact of political unrest has been severe
with absolute traffic (measured by RPKs) falling by 13.1% compared
to January levels.
Latin American airlines were least exposed
to volatility in February. Passenger demand increased by 11.8%.
This was virtually matched with a capacity expansion of 12.9%
allowing the regions carriers to maintain the strongest load
factor among regions at 76.4%.
Freight Demand
February
air freight volumes stood at the same level as the pre-recession
cycle peak in early 2008. But it was down almost 7% on the high
reached in May 2010 at the peak of business re-stocking.
The
industrys fundamentals are strong. Business confidence, as
measured by the purchasing managers index, reached its second highest level ever in February.
Air freight carried by
Asia Pacific carriers fell by 4.5% in February. This reflects
plant closures associated with Chinese New Year as well as the
impact of inflation-fighting measures in the Chinese economy. In
terms of volumes, this had the largest impact in slowing global growth to 2.3% - the weakest growth since the beginning of the
third quarter in 2009 when annual growth rates turned positive
again out of the recession. Compared to January, freight carried
by the regions carriers fell by 6.6%.
On the back of unrest in
Egypt and Tunisia, cargo carried by African carriers fell by 5.7%.
In absolute terms, the freight carried by the regions carriers
fell by 8.4% in February compared to January.
North American
carriers saw freight expand by 11.8%, second only to the robust
12.1% expansion by Latin American carriers. European carriers
showed weak growth of 6.3%, reflecting the regions proximity and
trade connections with North Africa and the continuing weakness in
the European economy.
The industry situation is volatile
and we are watching higher fuel prices carefully. Capacity
increases ahead of demand are bringing down load factors for both
passenger and cargo operations. Demand is still supported by
strong economic fundamentals. But with looser supply and demand
conditions, it will be a challenge for airlines to recover the
added costs of fuel. Our pathetic 1.4% expected margin for 2011 is
under considerable pressure, said Bisignani.
Based on an
average oil price of $96 per barrel, IATA is forecasting fuel to
account for 29% of average operating costs with a total fuel bill of $166 billion. For every dollar increase in the price of a
barrel of oil, the industry must recover an additional $1.6
billion in added costs.
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February 2011
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