Global air passenger traffic results from IATA for September
2016 show that demand (measured in revenue passenger
kilometers, or RPKs) grew 7% compared to the same month in 2015.
This was the strongest year-on-year increase in seven months.
Capacity climbed 6.6% and load factor edged up 0.3 percentage
points to 81.1%. Growth in domestic traffic slightly outpaced growth in international traffic.
"September’s growth in
passenger demand was healthy. Importantly, this rebound from
August weakness suggests that travel demand is showing its
resilience in the aftermath of terror attacks. We must, of course,
be ever-alert to the ongoing terror threat. And overall the
industry is still vulnerable to being buffeted by rising
geopolitical tensions, protectionist political agendas, and weak
economic fundamentals. This will still be a good year for the
airline industry’s performance, but our profitability will
continue to be hard-won," said Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s
Director General and CEO.
International RPKs climbed 6.9% with airlines in all regions
recording growth compared to 2015. Total capacity climbed 7.2%, causing load factor to slide 0.2 percentage points to 80.4%.
European carriers saw September demand rise 5.2% over
September 2015. Capacity rose 5.7% and load factor slipped 0.4 percentage points to 84.8%, which was the highest among regions.
Demand growth seems to be returning to normal after the disruption
caused by terrorism and political instability.
Asia Pacific airlines’ traffic rose 8.6% in September compared to
the year-ago period, although there are still signs of Asian travelers being put off by terrorism in Europe. Capacity increased
7.7%, and load factor rose 0.7 percentage points to 77.9%.
Middle East carriers had an 11.5% rise in demand in
September compared to a year ago, which was the largest increase
among regions. Capacity rose faster, however, up 13.8%, and load
factor dropped 1.5 percentage points to 73.9%.
North
American airlines experienced a 3.3% rise in demand. While the
upward trend in international traffic has eased of late, seasonally-adjusted passenger volumes have risen at an annualized
rate of 6% since March. Capacity rose 4.2% and load factor fell
0.7 percentage points to 81.5%.
Latin American
airlines’ September traffic rose 7.1% compared to the same month
last year, aided by strong demand on international routes within
the region. Capacity climbed just 2.4% and load factor surged 3.6
percentage points to 83.7%, second highest among regions.
African airlines posted an 8% rise in traffic which was
matched by an equivalent rise in capacity. Load factor was almost
flat at 72.0%. The strong demand increase largely reflected
favorable year-ago comparisons, as economic conditions in much of
the continent remain challenging.
Domestic Passenger
Markets
Domestic demand climbed 7.2% in September compared
to September 2015, which was up from the 4.1% year-on-year growth recorded in August.
India and China continued to experience
double-digit annual traffic increases while elsewhere, results
were decidedly mixed. All markets except Australia registered
all-time highs in September load factors.
US domestic
traffic resumed its healthy growth after a slowdown in July and
August, rising 4.6% in September year-over-year.
Japan’s domestic traffic slid 0.7% in September against a backdrop
of weak consumer spending.
Outlook
October
saw the global aviation industry take a major step ahead to ensure
that its growth is sustainable. "The nations of the world came
together through the International Civil Aviation Organization
(ICAO) to agree a plan to offset the environmental impact
generated by future air traffic growth. In taking this
unprecedented step toward achieving long-term sustainability for
an entire industrial sector, governments recognized the immense
contribution aviation makes to economic development and global
well-being. In conjunction with our investments in more efficient
technologies, infrastructure and operations, this will ensure that
aviation can continue to be the business of freedom, connecting
our world with safe, efficient, reliable and sustainable air
transport," said de Juniac.
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