Global airline traffic results from IATA for
June 2012 show a continued slowing of growth in the demand for air
transport.
Year-on-year, demand for air travel in June
expanded by 6.2%. Capacity grew by a much more cautious 4.5%
leaving load factors at 81%. While this appears to be a healthy
growth rate, the growth trend since early 2012 has seen a
slowdown. This is illustrated by isolating the February through
June trend which shows 2% annualized growth. That is a major
slowdown from the 8% annualized growth rate experienced from
mid-2011 through to January 2012.
June air freight
volumes recorded a 0.8% increase compared to the previous year.
This brings seasonally adjusted June demand about 2.5% above the
low reached in the fourth quarter of 2011. The global picture
masks strong growth for Middle East airlines (17.9%) and the
improvement in North American air freight demand.
“The uncertainty that we see in the global economic situation is
being reflected in air transport’s performance. Although there are
some pockets of solid performance, it is difficult to detect a
strong trend—positive or negative—at the global level. Passenger
markets have been growing more slowly since the beginning of the
year and freight markets gains have been mostly very weak. The net
effect is a demand limbo as consumers and businesses hedge their
spending while awaiting clarity on the European economic front,”
said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO.
International Passenger Markets
June demand in
international passenger markets was up 7.4% on the previous year.
The growth trend, however, shows little promise. While passenger
markets experienced strong growth through to the end of 2011, this
has slowed continuously in 2012. For example, from May to June
2012 demand was up just 0.2%. When looked at over the second quarter of 2012, the trend in international air travel has been an
annualized growth rate of just over 2%.
European
airlines experienced strong growth in June (7.3%), well ahead of
the May result (4.3%). Given the continuing economic uncertainty
centered on Europe, the strong June performance is more likely a
result of volatility in weak market conditions. The previous few
months had seen the growth trend flatten out, after a solid 6%
annualized growth rate from mid-2011 through the first quarter of
2012. Capacity was up 4.9% and load factors stood at 82.5%.
North American airlines saw 1.6% growth in demand while
capacity was cut by 0.3% compared to the previous June. This pushed the load factor to 86.9% which was the highest among the
regions. Compared to May there was basically no growth with the
region’s airlines reporting a 0.1% decline in demand.
Asia Pacific carriers reported a 6.0% growth in demand which was
more than double the 2.9% expansion in capacity for June, when
compared to the same month in 2011. The load factor for the
region’s carriers stood at 79.5%. Month-to-month, the demand in
the region was basically flat at -0.1%. The growth trend for the
region is similar to that of the overall market. From mid-2011 to
the start of 2012, Asia Pacific carriers experienced a 9.5%
annualized growth in demand. That has slowed to 2% for the
February to June period.
Middle East carriers were the
strongest performers with demand growth of 18.2% outstripping a
capacity expansion of 13.4%. Load factors stood at 78.6%. In
contrast to the overall market, the growth trend in this region
has been robust throughout 2012, gaining a further 1.9% in June
compared to May.
Latin American airlines also performed
well in June, recording an 11.2% gain in demand compared to the
previous year. Demand growth slightly outpaced a capacity
expansion of 10.7%, but load factors were among the weakest at
77.4%.
African carriers showed growth of 10.1%, slightly
behind a capacity expansion of 10.6%. At 65.0%, the region’s load
factor was the weakest.
Domestic Passenger Markets
All markets, except India, showed an expansion in
demand in June compared to the previous year. Similar to the developments in international travel, however, economic slowdowns
in various countries are keeping the growth trend soft throughout
2012. The first six months of 2012 have seen overall domestic air
travel growth trend slow to a 2% annualized rate, after increasing
at more than 6% annualized growth over the second half of 2011.
Overall, domestic demand grew by 4.1%, slightly ahead of capacity
which grew by 3.6%. The domestic load factor stood at 81.1%.
India’s domestic travel fell by 0.7% in June even as
capacity expanded by 4.5%. The load factor was 74.2%. This is the second month of weak year-on-year growth, and the trend in growth
continues to be flat since the start of 2012.
Japan’s
domestic market continues to look flat. The post-earthquake and
tsunami rebound lost steam towards the end of 2011. Demand was up
10.4% compared to last June, but the overall market remains about
8% below pre-earthquake and tsunami levels. Japanese domestic load
factors were the weakest at 58.2%.
Brazil recorded
domestic demand growth of 13.8%, double the capacity expansion of
6.5% and a load factor of 71.1%. The trend in traffic growth since
the start of the year has weakened, however, with domestic demand
in June more than 1% lower compared to January.
Chinese
domestic air travel grew 7.8% compared to the previous June and
was below the capacity expansion of 8.7%. This in an improvement
on recent months, when year-on-year growth rates fell to levels
not seen since the start of 2011. In fact, weakness in the trend
in domestic travel has been present throughout 2012, with little
increase since the start of the year, consistent with the slowdown
seen in the Chinese economy. The load factor, nonetheless,
remained strong at 81.3%.
US domestic demand was up 0.8%
compared to the previous June. With capacity growth held to 0.1%,
US carriers reported a load factor of 86.6%--the highest among the
major domestic markets.
Freight (International and
Domestic)
While air freight performance remains
soft it is nonetheless an improvement on the weak market
conditions of a year ago. Compared to June 2011, freight demand
has grown by 0.8%, behind a capacity expansion of 1.7%. The
current level of demand shows an improvement of about 2.5% on the
market lows reached in the fourth quarter of 2011.
North American carriers saw demand grow 1.8% compared to the
previous June, while capacity shrank by 1.0%. An improvement in
economic conditions and particularly consumer demand in the US has
helped support the increase in air freight demand in that region
throughout 2012. Middle East carriers recorded a 17.9 % increase
in demand against a 14.2% increase in capacity. Middle Eastern
airlines have been adding capacity to meet the need for moving
goods between the Middle East and Africa and also toward Europe
and Asia. African airlines were also in positive territory with a
15.9% increase in demand against a 12.1% increase in capacity.
Asia Pacific airlines reported a 3% decline in demand ahead
of a 1.3% trimming of capacity. The slowdown in major Asian economies
- China and India - has put a dampener on air freight
demand for the airlines in Asia Pacific. Continued economic woes
and waning consumer confidence in Europe has seen air freight in
the region decline by 1.1% compared to June 2011, even as capacity
grew by 1.8%. Latin American airlines recorded a 1.4% decline in
demand while capacity grew by 12.5%.
Aviation Growth
“Governments
around the world are recognizing the important role of tourism in
driving economic growth. Aviation is the backbone of the tourism
industry. On average some 50% of international tourists arrive by
air. To benefit the most from tourism, governments need
comprehensive and internally coordinated policies. In many parts
of the world, aviation suffers from high taxes, insufficient
infrastructure and cumbersome regulation. Tourism and aviation
ministries understand the catalytic impact of aviation on the
economy. Today the industry supports some 57 million jobs and $2.2
trillion in economic activity. The challenge is to get all
ministries aligned and on the same page with policies to
facilitate sustainable aviation growth that will drive further
benefits across local, regional and national economies,” said
Tyler.
See other recent news regarding:
Travel News Asia,
Interviews,
Pictures,
Sports Tourism,
Videos,
IATA,
June 2012
|