Combined Cathay Pacific and Dragonair traffic
figures for March 2013 show an increase in the number of
passengers carried compared to the same month in 2012, alongside a
decrease in cargo and mail tonnage.
Cathay Pacific and Dragonair carried a total of
2,550,108 passengers in March 2013 – an increase of 6.7% compared
to the same month last year. The passenger load factor climbed by
4.0 percentage points to 83.4%, while capacity, measured in
available seat kilometres (ASKs), fell by 6.6%. In the first
quarter of 2013, the number of passengers carried showed a 2.8%
increase against a capacity decline of 6.4%.
Cathay Pacific General Manager Revenue
Management, James Tong said, “The pick-up in our passenger business
continued to gather pace in March, boosted by the
Hong Kong Sevens
and the start of the Easter peak. Demand in all cabins was robust
throughout the month and we mounted a number of additional flights
to cater for demand over the Easter and Ching Ming holiday period.
We also began to restore some of the flights that were cancelled
last year as part of our cost-saving initiatives. Flights were
added back on the Toronto and Los Angeles routes at the end of
March, and New York will resume to four flights a day from
September.”
The two airlines carried 136,504 tonnes of cargo
and mail last month, a drop of 5.3% compared to March 2012. The
cargo and mail load factor fell by 1.9 percentage points to 66.4%.
Capacity, measured in available cargo/mail tonne kilometres,
declined by 8.3%, while cargo and mail revenue tonne kilometres
were down by 10.8%. In the first quarter of 2013, the tonnage drop
of 1.4% compared to a 4.8% capacity decrease.
Cathay Pacific General Manager Cargo Sales &
Marketing, James Woodrow, said, “We saw little change in the overall
market situation in March. Demand was slow to recover from the
extended closure of factories over the Chinese New Year period in
February, and there was no significant surge out of our two key
markets, Hong Kong and Mainland China. The major airfreight
markets have been soft for two years now and, with no sign of any
sustained pick-up in sight, we will continue to manage our
freighter capacity in line with market demand.”
Cathay Pacific,
Hong Kong
|