IATA’s global passenger traffic results (revenue
passenger kilometers or RPKs) for June 2015 shows a 5.7% increase
in demand compared to June 2014.
This is a slowdown compared to the 6.9%
year-on-year growth recorded in May 2015, in part owing to the
timing of Ramadan, which depressed travel demand in the Middle
East. June capacity (available seat kilometers or ASKs) climbed
6.0%, and load factor dipped 0.2 percentage points to 81.1%.
"June was another healthy month for demand for
air connectivity, although slower trade activity in emerging
Asia Pacific markets and the impact of the Greek debt crisis on
European travel remain worrisome," said Tony Tyler, IATA’s
Director General and CEO.
June international passenger demand rose 5.3%
compared to June 2014. Airlines in all regions except Africa
recorded growth although there was wide variation between regions.
Capacity climbed 6.0% pushing down load factor 0.5 percentage
points to 80.4%.
Asia Pacific airlines’ June traffic rose 6.8%
compared to the year-ago period, which was down from a 9.3% rise
recorded in May. Capacity climbed 5.8% and load factor increased
0.7 percentage points to 78.1%. Latest data show that trade
activity to/from Emerging Asia is down 8% compared to the end of
2014, while China’s manufacturing sector has been struggling in
recent months, accompanied by weakness in export orders, according
to the financial data firm Markit.
European carriers saw demand climb 4.1% in
June versus June 2014, which was below the 5.7% rise in traffic in
May. Although business activity indicators suggest that the
region’s economic recovery is on track, consumer sentiment has
been hampered by events in Greece including the potential
consequences of the country exiting the Eurozone. Capacity rose
3.5% and load factor climbed 0.4 percentage points to 84.0%.
North American airlines experienced a 2.7% increase in
traffic, which was above the 2% increase recorded in May. Capacity
rose 2.8% and load factor slipped 0.1 percentage points to 84.9%, which still was the highest among the regions. While it is
expected that the US had better economic performance in the second
quarter than the first quarter, the strengthening dollar is likely
to continue to put pressure on international leisure travel to the
US.
Middle East carriers’ June demand climbed 10.5%
but this was eclipsed by a 19.5% jump in capacity that caused load
factor to plunge 5.7 percentage points to 74.3%. Although June
traffic growth was slower than in May (14%), this was partly owing
to the timing of Ramadan, which started in June this year but
occurred mostly in July in 2014. The holy month tends to subdue
demand for air travel.
Latin American airlines had a
5.9% rise in traffic compared to June 2014. Capacity rose 5.8%,
causing load factor to edge up 0.1 percentage points to 79.6%.
Regional trade volumes showed strong improvement during the first
half of 2015, providing a boost to business-related international
travel despite weakness in Brazil and Argentina.
African airlines’ traffic fell 2.0% in June year-to-year, due to
negative economic developments in parts of the continent including
Nigeria, which relies heavily on oil revenues. Capacity slipped
1.7% and load factor dipped 0.2 percentage points to 67.1%.
Domestic Passenger Markets
Domestic travel demand
rose 6.5% in June compared to June 2014, with the strongest growth
occurring in India, China and the Russian Federation. Total
domestic capacity was up 6.0%, and load factor was 82.2%, up 0.4
percentage points.
Australia’s airlines saw domestic traffic decline by 2.1% in June
as signs of an improving economy have not spurred a turnaround in
air travel.
Russian air travel experienced a spike
in June (+9.5%) as a combination of added capacity and a weak
ruble helped boost domestic air travel, despite the country’s
economic woes. The increase was nonetheless outstripped by the
16.6% increase in domestic capacity.
Governments, Policies and Aviation
"Midway through the peak summer travel season in the Northern
Hemisphere, demand for connectivity remains high. Tourism is the
life blood of many economies and much of it arrives by air. Unfortunately, too often governments appear not to realize this,
burdening airlines and travelers with high fees and taxes. The
short-term financial benefit comes at the long-term expense of the economy. The French government’s decision to
allow annual charges
increases at Paris’s two airports between 2016 and 2020 is the
latest example - incredible for a country where tourism and global
business play such big economic roles. Dialogue between industry
and government is critical to finding win-win solutions.
"That is what we are hoping for in India with the imminent
announcement of its new aviation policy. Improved air connectivity
would make a major contribution to the government’s efforts to
make it easier to do business in India. For that, we need a policy
framework that reduces onerous taxes and regulation and that
continues to improve infrastructure and cost efficiency. Aviation
has much to contribute to any country’s economy. But it will not
happen by accident. The peak travel season should serve as a
reminder to all governments of the importance of aviation policies
focused on enabling aviation to catalyze economic growth," said
Tyler.
IATA,
Traffic
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