IATA's global passenger traffic results for
March 2015 shows demand (revenue passenger kilometers or RPKs)
rose 7.4% compared to March 2014.
This was an improvement on February, when
year-on-year growth was 6.4%. The acceleration in the year-on-year
comparison reflects the residual impact of the February Lunar New
Year celebrations, which tend to boost leisure travel in the weeks
before and after the holiday. In 2014, the holiday occurred at the
end of January. However, underlying traffic trends confirm demand
remains robust.
March capacity rose 5.6% and load factor
climbed 1.3 percentage points to 80.0%. Domestic markets
experienced stronger growth than international markets, but both
performed well.
"March traffic continues the trend of healthy
demand for travel. We may, however, see a softening of demand in
the second quarter. There are signs that regional trade activity
in Asia-Pacific may be slowing and Eurozone economic weakness
continues to disappoint," said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General
and CEO.
International Passenger Markets
March international passenger traffic rose 7.0%
compared to the year-ago period. Capacity climbed 5.4% and load
factor increased 1.2 percentage points to 78.9%. All regions
recorded year-over increases in demand except for Africa.
Asia Pacific airlines recorded an 11.1% increase in demand
compared to March 2014, strongest among the regions. The timing of
the Lunar New Year in mid-February contributed to the robust
performance as holiday-related travel continued into early March.
Capacity rose 7.1%, boosting load factor 2.9 percentage points to
78.5%. The underlying trend in air travel on Asia Pacific carriers
is likely to be weaker than performance suggests as regional trade
activity appears to be slowing after strong gains in late 2014.
European carriers’ international traffic climbed 5.4% in
March compared to the year-ago period. Capacity rose 3.6% and load
factor climbed 1.4 percentage points to 80.8%, highest among the
regions. While the Eurozone is reporting very weak economic
expansion, outside the Eurozone, nations like Turkey continue to
record strong growth.
North American airlines
experienced just a 2.7% traffic rise in March over a year ago,
reflecting the maturity of these travel markets. The US economy
continues to lead developed economies in performance. Capacity
rose 2.1%, edging up load factor 0.5 percentage points to 80.4%.
Middle East carriers demand climbed 9.8% in March but
capacity growth of 11.9% meant that load factor fell 1.5
percentage points to 77.1% compared to March 2014. Middle East economies are comparatively well-placed to withstand the drop in
oil prices and measures of non-oil-related business activity
continue to show improvement.
Latin American
airlines’ traffic rose 4.3% in March compared to March 2014.
Regional trade volumes have been improving, but the Brazilian
economy continues to tread water. Capacity rose 5.5% and load
factor slipped 0.9 percentage points to 77.4%.
African airlines endured another month of declining demand, as
traffic dropped 1.1% in March compared to a year ago. The weakness
reflects adverse economic developments in parts of the continent
including Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, which is suffering
from the collapse in oil prices. Accompanying cuts in capacity of
3.2%, pushed load factor upwards 1.4 percentage points to 65.7%,
still the lowest among the regions.
Domestic Passenger
Markets
Domestic air travel rose 8.0% in March
year-on-year, driven by growth in China and India. Capacity rose
6.0% and load factor was 82.0%, up 1.5% percentage points over
March 2014.
China domestic air travel soared 22% in March compared to a year
ago, showing the residual impact of the Lunar New Year
celebrations. However, recent data show that GDP for the first
quarter was 7.0%, which was slightly less than fourth quarter 2014
growth of 7.3%.
India’s airlines saw traffic jump
17.9% in March, likely reflecting market stimulation by local
carriers and a strengthening economy.
Looking Forward
"Next month, Miami will be the
focus of the global air transport industry, when the 71st IATA
Annual General Meeting will take place, 7-9 June. The United
States is the world’s largest market and among its most vibrant
economies, in part owing to the enormous contribution made by
aviation. In the US, aviation supports some 5.7 million jobs and
nearly $562 billion in GDP. Our message is that aviation can play
an even bigger role, but only if governments understand that
aviation’s greatest contribution is in the value creation it
enables, not in the taxes and fees that can be extracted from it,"
said Tyler.
IATA,
Traffic
|