IATA's global passenger traffic results for 2015
shows demand (revenue passenger kilometers or RPKs) rose 6.5% for
the full year compared to 2014.
This was the strongest result since the
post-Global Financial Crisis rebound in 2010 and well above the
10-year average annual growth rate of 5.5%. While economic
fundamentals were weaker in 2015 compared to 2014, passenger
demand was boosted by lower airfares. After adjusting for
distortions caused by the rise of the US dollar, global airfares
last year were approximately 5% lower than in 2014.
"Last year’s very strong performance, against a
weaker economic backdrop, confirms the strong demand for aviation
connectivity. But even as the appetite for air travel increased,
consumers benefitted from lower fares compared to 2014," said Tony
Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO.
Annual capacity rose 5.6% last year, with the
result that load factor climbed 0.6 percentage points to a record
annual high of 80.3%. All regions experienced positive traffic
growth in 2015. Carriers in the Asia Pacific region accounted for
one-third of the total annual increase in traffic.
International Passenger
Markets
International passenger traffic rose 6.5% in
2015 compared to 2014. Capacity rose 5.9% and load factor rose 0.5
percentage points to 79.7%. All regions recorded year-over-year
increases in demand.
Asia Pacific carriers recorded a demand
increase of 8.2% compared to 2014, which was the largest increase
among the three largest regions. Demand was stimulated by a 7.3%
increase in the number of direct airport connections in the
region, resulting in time-savings for travelers. Capacity rose
6.4%, pushing up load factor 1.3 percentage points to 78.2%.
European carriers’ international traffic
climbed 5.0% in 2015. Capacity rose 3.8% and load factor increased
1.0 percentage point to 82.6%, highest among the regions. The
healthy result in part was attributable to a pick-up in consumer
spending in the Eurozone as well as a moderate increase in flight
frequencies. Traffic growth slowed toward the end of the year
owing to strikes at Lufthansa and the shutdown of Russia’s
Transaero.
North American airlines saw demand rise
3.2% in 2015, broadly unchanged from the growth achieved in 2014.
Capacity rose 3.1%, edging up load factor 0.1 percentage points to
81.8%.
Middle East carriers had the strongest
annual traffic growth at 10.5%. As a result, the share of
international traffic carried by Middle East airlines reached
14.2%, surpassing their North American counterparts (13.4%).
Capacity growth of 13.2% exceeded the demand gains, pushing down
load factor 1.7 percentage points to 76.4%.
Latin American airlines’ traffic rose 9.3%
in 2015. Capacity rose 9.2% and load factor inched up 0.1
percentage points to 80.1%. While key regional economies,
particularly Brazil, have been struggling, overall traffic has
been robust.
African airlines had the slowest annual
demand growth, up 3.0%, although this was a significant
improvement over the 0.9% annual growth achieved in 2014. With
capacity up just half as much as traffic, load factor climbed 1
percentage point to 68.5%. International traffic rose strongly in
the second half of 2015, in conjunction with a jump in trade
activity to and from the region.
Domestic Passenger
Markets
Domestic air travel rose 6.3% in 2015. All
markets showed growth, led by India and China but there was wide
variance. Capacity rose 5.2% and load factor was 81.5%, up 0.9
percentage points over 2014.
Brazil’s domestic air travel rose just
0.8% in 2015, reflecting the country’s deteriorating economic
situation. Traffic trended downward throughout the year.
US domestic traffic climbed 4.9% last
year, helped by solid economic growth. This was the fastest rate
of increase since 2004 and the first time since 2003 that domestic
traffic growth surpassed international growth. The load factor
reached a domestic record high of 85.4%.
"Aviation delivered strong results for the
global economy in 2015, enabling connectivity and helping to drive
economic development. The value of aviation is well understood by
friends and families whom aviation brings together, by business
travelers meeting clients in distant cities, and particularly by
those for whom aviation is a lifeline in times of crisis," said
Mr. Tyler. "It is very disappointing to see that some governments
still wrongly believe that the value of taxes and charges that can
be extracted from air transport outweighs the benefits—economic
and social—of connectivity. The most recent example is the
dramatic increase in the Italian Council Tax levied on air
passengers. This 33-38% hike will damage Italian economic
competitiveness, reduce passenger numbers by over 755,000 and GDP
by EUR 146 million per year. An estimated 2,300 jobs a year will
be lost. At a time when the global economy is showing signs of
weakening, governments should be looking for ways to stimulate
spending, not discourage it."
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