IATA's global air travel demand statistics for
January 2013 show a continuation of the uptick in passenger travel
that began at the end of 2012.
Overall, demand was up 2.7% on the
previous January which is slightly ahead of the 2.2% expansion in
capacity. Load factors stood at 77.1%.
Strong demand for air travel driven by the
Chinese New Year has distorted the January figures. In 2012 Chinese New
Year fell in January, while this year it was in February. The
comparisons to such a strong month made January 2013 demand look
weaker than the underlying trend would indicate. After adjusting
for such seasonal factors, IATA estimates that the actual growth
would have been 3.5%. This growth is still lower than the 5.3%
2012 average. However, air travel growth slowed sharply through
the year and the results of the past few months represent an
acceleration of demand growth.
“Passenger travel
is growing in line with business confidence levels. Recent months
have seen some positive economic signs emerge in both the US and
China, and the Eurozone crisis seems to have stabilized. Of course
risks remain; the impact of US budget cuts has yet to play out and
fuel prices are high. But even with those headwinds - real and
potential - we still see underlying support for continued and
potentially even strengthened growth,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s
Director General and CEO.
International Air Travel
International markets outperformed the global industry
average in January with a 3.7% increase in demand against a 2.7% capacity expansion. This led to load factors of 77.6%.
Asia Pacific airlines have captured over half of the
growth in demand between October and January. The year-on-year growth rate in January (0.1%) was distorted by the timing of the
Chinese New Year. After adjusting for seasonal factors, January
saw demand growth in the region of 3.0% for Asia Pacific airlines
compared to a year ago. Load factors for the region’s airlines
stood at 77.8%.
Middle East airlines posted the strongest
growth rates for January with a 14.3% increase in demand. This was
nearly evenly matched by a 14.4% growth in capacity and load
factors for the region were above the global average at 78.6%. The
region’s carriers have successfully tapped into demand from
emerging markets with the strength of their network structures and efficient hubs.
African airlines posted 9.4% growth,
ahead of a 5.8% capacity expansion. Despite this, the region’s
airlines recorded the weakest load factors at 67.9%. Economic
growth rates in many African nations are strong - particularly those
in resource-rich West Africa. This is providing the demand for a
sustained market expansion.
Latin American airlines
posted the second highest growth in demand at 12.2%. This was
outpaced by capacity growth of 13.7%. Load factors stood at 79.0%,
only exceeded by North American airlines. The regions’ growth is
being fueled by expanding economies - particularly Bolivia, Chile,
Colombia and Peru - where reduced unemployment has boosted consumer
demand.
North American carriers reported a 1.5% expansion
in demand even as capacity was trimmed by 0.8% when compared to year-ago levels. Demand is strong on the back of improved economic
performance in the US. And airlines are tightly managing capacity.
The region’s airlines posted the highest load factor at 79.4%.
European airlines were among the weaker performers, with
2.1% demand growth on 0.4% capacity expansion. Load factors stood
at 77.1% which was below the global average. While demand was up
on the year-ago period, it should be noted that the region’s
airlines have posted no growth in international markets since
October. And when compared to December levels there a 0.3% decline
in demand occurred. The Eurozone crisis may have stabilized, but
the region’s economies are not growing and its airlines remained
burdened by high taxes, onerous regulation and infrastructure
constraints.
Domestic Air Travel
Domestic air travel expanded by 1.1%, slightly behind a capacity
expansion of 1.4%. Load factors were 76.4%, but after seasonal
adjustment, the load factor reached a record high, exceeding 80%.
China is the second largest market for domestic air travel and was
the most skewed by the shift in Chinese New Year from January in
2012 to February this year. Adjusting for this, we estimate that
domestic market demand expanded by about 5% compared to the
year-ago period.
Chinese domestic travel was up
just 0.1% on previous-year levels. Performance appears weak owing
to the shift in Chinese New Year. After adjusting for seasonal
factors, we estimate that the actual expansion in demand was about
5%. The load factor was 77.4%, slightly better than the global
average.
Japan saw a 3.0% decline in domestic travel,
matched by a 2.9% decline in capacity. The Japanese domestic
market is still 12% below pre-tsunami and earthquake levels. A
combination of factors has negatively impacted domestic travel in
Japan. These include a gradual weakening of its export-led economy
and the impact of the strong Yen which has made international
travel options more competitive. Domestic load factors were weak
at 56.4%.
Brazil’s domestic market demand contracted by
3.7% in January compared to the previous year. High income growth
and low unemployment should provide a stimulus to domestic demand.
However this is being compromised by slower-than-expected economic
growth, high costs and infrastructure constraints. In response,
airlines have cut capacity by 9.1% compared to January 2012.
India’s domestic market was also in negative territory with
a 4.9% decline in demand and 5.3% capacity reduction. Load factors
stood at 75.9%. One of the major domestic players has effectively
exited the market, economic growth is weak, infrastructure costs
are rising and the impact of high fuel prices is being exaggerated
by excessive taxation (particularly at the state level).
Domestic demand for air travel in the US was up 3.2% on year-ago
levels, ahead of a 2.4% capacity expansion. Load factors were the
highest at 78.8%. The extent to which US budget cuts could impact
the domestic aviation market remains to be seen.
The Bottom Line
Global attention is focused on the
US to understand the economic impact of mandated budget cuts. For
millions of travelers and the aviation industry, the concerns go
deeper. There are threats of reduced availability of
government-provided services for airport security, border control
and air traffic management.
“That the connectivity
of the world’s largest economy is being held captive to politics
is not acceptable. Airlines pay for air traffic management
services through fees and taxes that average 20% of the cost of a
typical domestic air ticket. Clearly there are some difficult
budget decisions for the US government to make. But compromising
connectivity—which supports 9.3 million jobs and $669.5 billion in
economic activity in the US—is not the right choice,” said Tyler.
See also:
Signs of Stabilization as Air Cargo Grows in January
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