IATA has forecast that 7.2 billion passengers
will travel in 2035, a near doubling of the 3.8 billion air
travelers in 2016.
The prediction is based on a 3.7% annual
Compound Average Growth Rate (CAGR) noted in the release of the
latest update to the association’s 20-Year Air Passenger Forecast.
"People want to fly. Demand for air travel over
the next two decades is set to double. Enabling people and nations
to trade, explore, and share the benefits of innovation and
economic prosperity makes our world a better place," said
Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s Director General and CEO.
The forecast for passenger growth confirms that
the biggest driver of demand will be the Asia-Pacific region. It
is expected to be the source of more than half the new passengers
over the next 20 years. China will displace the US as the world’s
largest aviation market (defined by traffic to, from and within
the country) around 2029. India will displace the UK for third
place in 2026, while Indonesia enters the top ten at the expense
of Italy. Growth will also increasingly be driven within
developing markets. Over the past decade the developing world’s
share of total passenger traffic has risen from 24% to nearly 40%,
and this trend is set to continue.
Risks, Challenges and Opportunities
The 20-year forecast puts forward three
scenarios. The central scenario foresees a doubling of passengers
with a 3.7% annual CAGR. If trade liberalization gathers pace,
demand could triple the 2015 level. Conversely, if the current
trend towards trade protectionism gathers strength, growth could
cool to 2.5% annual CAGR which would see passenger numbers reach
5.8 billion by 2035.
"Economic growth is the only durable solution
for the world’s current economic woes. Yet we see governments
raising barriers to trade rather than making it easier. If this
continues in the long-term, it will mean slower growth and the
world will be poorer for it. For aviation, the protectionist
scenario could see growth slowing to as low as 2.5% annually. Not
only will that mean fewer new aviation jobs, it will mean that
instead of 7.2 billion travelers in 2035, we will have 5.8
billion. The economic impact of that will be broad and hard-felt,"
said de Juniac.
Whatever scenario is eventually realized, growth
will put pressure on infrastructure that is already struggling to
cope with demand.
"Runways, terminals, security and baggage
systems, air traffic control, and a whole raft of other elements
need to be expanded to be ready for the growing number of flyers.
It cannot be done by the industry alone. Planning for change
requires governments, communities and the industry working
together in partnership," said de Juniac.
The industry will also need to be able to grow
sustainably. Earlier this month airlines supported the
establishment of a Carbon Offset and Reduction Scheme for
International Aviation (CORSIA). This landmark agreement—the first
among governments to manage the emissions growth of an entire
global industrial sector—aims to cap net emissions with carbon
neutral growth from 2020.
"Aviation is at the forefront of
industries in managing its carbon footprint. Along with offsetting
emissions through CORSIA, airlines are working with partners in
industry and government to advance technology, improve operations
and generate more efficiencies in infrastructure," said de Juniac.
Key Facts (based on central growth forecast)
The five fastest-growing markets in terms of
additional passengers per year over the forecast period will be:
- China (817 million new passengers for a total
of 1.3 billion) - US (484 million new passengers for a total of
1.1 billion) - India (322 million new passengers for a total of
442 million) - Indonesia (135 million new passengers for a total
of 242 million) - Vietnam (112 million new passengers for a
total of 150 million).
The top ten fastest-growing markets in
percentage terms will be in Africa: Sierra Leone, Guinea, Central
African Republic, Benin, Mali, Rwanda, Togo, Uganda, Zambia and
Madagascar. Each of these markets is expected to grow by more than
8% each year on average over the next 20 years, doubling in size
each decade.
Regional Growth
- Routes to, from and within Asia Pacific will
see an extra 1.8 billion annual passengers by 2035, for an overall
market size of 3.1 billion. Its annual average growth rate of 4.7%
will be the second-highest, behind the Middle East.
- The North American region will grow by 2.8%
annually and in 2035 will carry a total of 1.3 billion passengers,
an additional 536 million passengers per year.
- Europe will have the slowest growth rate,
2.5%, but will still add an additional 570 million passengers a
year. The total market will be 1.5 billion passengers.
- Latin American markets will grow by 3.8%,
serving a total of 658 million passengers, an additional 345
million passengers annually compared to today.
- The Middle East will grow strongly (5.0%) and
will see an extra 258 million passengers a year on routes to, from
and within the region by 2035. The UAE, Qatar and Saudi Arabia
will all enjoy strong growth of 6.3%, 4.7%, and 4.1% respectively.
The total market size will be 414 million passengers.
- Africa will grow by 5.1%. By 2035 it will see
an extra 192 million passengers a year for a total market of 303
million passengers.
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