According to IATA, scheduled international
traffic results for March 2011 show that year-on-year growth in
passenger demand slowed to 3.8% from the 5.8% recorded in February
2011.
Conversely, year-on-year growth in freight markets rebounded
to 3.7% in March from the 1.8% recorded in February.
Compared to
February, global passenger demand fell by 0.3% in March, while
cargo demand expanded by 4.5%.
“The profile of the
recovery in air transport sharply decelerated in March. The global
industry lost 2 percentage points of demand as a result of the
earthquake and tsunami in Japan and the political unrest in the
Middle East and North Africa (MENA),” said Giovanni Bisignani,
IATA’s Director General and CEO.
The impact of the
events in Japan on global international traffic was a 1% loss of
traffic in March. Looked at regionally, Asia Pacific carriers saw
a traffic loss of over 2%, North American carriers had a 1% drop
and Europe’s carriers a 0.5% fall. Japan’s domestic market was the
most severely impacted with a 22% fall in demand.
The disruptions in MENA cut international travel by 0.9 percentage
points. Egypt and Tunisia experienced traffic levels 10-25% below normal for March. Military action in Libya virtually stopped civil
aviation to, from and within that country.
Capacity adjustments lagged behind the sudden drop in demand.
Against global demand growth of 3.8%, capacity expanded by 8.6%. The average load factor fell by 3.5 percentage points to 74.6%.
International Passenger Demand
Europe’s carriers saw demand levels of 5.3% above March 2010. This
was down from the 7.4% year-on-year growth in February. Compared
to February levels, Europe’s carriers added 0.5% to capacity but
experienced zero demand growth. This pushed load factors down by
0.3 percentage points to 75.3%. Long-haul business travel is
strong (except to Japan) but weak economic prospects continue to dampen intra-European traffic.
North American carriers
saw a 3.7% year-on-year improvement in demand in March. This was a
3 percentage point tumble from the 6.7% growth recorded in
February. Compared to February levels, demand dropped 0.9% while
capacity was up 0.3%. This led to a 0.9 percentage point drop in
load factors from their February levels to 76.9%.
Asia Pacific carriers saw the broadest negative turn of fortunes
in March. Compared to the previous year passenger demand was flat. Compared to February however demand contracted by 2.2% while 0.8%
was added to capacity. This led to a sharp 2.3 percentage point fall in load factors to 74.2% in March.
Latin American
carriers experienced a 22.2% increase in demand compared to the
previous March which was severely depressed due to the earthquake
in Chile. Compared to February, demand was up by 4.7% while
capacity expanded by 2.2%. Load factors improved 1.9 percentage
points to 77% in March—the highest among all regions.
Middle East carriers saw year-on-year demand growth fall from 8.3%
in February to 5.6% in March. Compared to the previous month (February) demand was up by 0.1% while capacity expanded by 0.8%.
This pushed the load factor down 0.6 percentage points to 73.2%.
African carriers saw demand fall 7.0% compared to the
previous March. This is an improvement from the 9.7% drop recorded
in February. Compared to the previous month, the region saw demand
expand by 6.5% against an increase in capacity of 6.2%. Load
factors improved by 0.2 percentage points to 62.7%. This is
sharply below the industry average of 74.6%.
International Air Freight
From the second half of
2010 until January 2011, international air freight expanded in
tandem with the growth in world trade at an annualized rate of
about 10%. This was dented in February 2011 when growth, for a
number of factors, fell to 1.8% over the same month in the
previous year. The 3.7% year-on-year increase in March reflects
more normal trading conditions (outside of Japan and MENA) during
the month.
Asia Pacific carriers, which account for 43%
of global freight markets, saw air freight demand contract by 0.6%
in March compared to the previous year. This is considerably
better than the 5.4% fall in February which was exceptionally
depressed due to plant closures associated with the Chinese New
Year. Compared to February, freight demand actually improved by
8.2%. Were it not for the earthquake and tsunami in Japan, the
rebound would have been much stronger.
Compared to the
previous March, cargo traffic carried by European and North
American carriers was up 6.1% and 7.1% respectively. Compared to
February, European carriers carried 1.8% more cargo, while demand
for North American carriers was basically flat at 0.2%.
Middle East and Latin American carriers reported year-on-year
freight demand increases in March of 10.1% and 10.4% respectively. African carriers reported the worst performance for March 2011
with a 2.8% fall in demand compared to March 2010.
Looking Ahead
The second quarter is likely to
see continued depressed air travel markets due to the events in
Japan and MENA. However, strong underlining economic growth trends
should support recovery in both passenger and cargo markets in the
second half of 2011.
“The big uncertainty is the
price of oil. Even in the $120 a barrel range, it appears that
strong economic growth in markets outside of Europe is continuing.
We see this in the strong demand from business for premium travel
which maintained 7.7% growth through February. But many leisure
travelers are putting off flying because of the impact of high oil
prices. The fragility of the situation is demonstrated by the
considerably weaker 3.3% year-on-year growth in economy class
travel in February. And, despite efficiency gains, the industry’s
1.4% profit margin leaves it vulnerable in the face of volatile
markets,” said Bisignani.
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March 2011
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