IATA has updated its global passenger forecast
after the recovery in traffic has been slower than the association
had expected. In the base case scenario:
- Global passenger traffic, as measured in
revenue passenger kilometers (RPKs), will not return to
pre-COVID19 levels until 2024, a year later than previously
projected.
- The recovery in short haul travel is still
expected to happen faster than for long haul travel. As a result,
passenger numbers will recover faster than traffic measured in
RPKs. Recovery to pre-COVID19 levels, however, will also slide by
a year from 2022 to 2023. For 2020, global passenger numbers
(enplanements) are expected to decline by 55% compared to 2019,
worsened from the April forecast of 46%.
June 2020 passenger traffic foreshadowed the
slower-than-expected recovery. Traffic, measures in RPK, fell
86.5% compared to the year-ago period. That is only slightly
improved from a 91% contraction in May, driven by
rising demand in domestic markets, particularly China. The June
load factor set an all-time low for the month at 57.6%.
The more pessimistic recovery outlook is based on
a number of recent trends:
- Slow virus containment in the US and developing
economies: Although developed economies outside of the US have
been largely successful in containing the spread of the virus,
renewed outbreaks have occurred in these economies, and in China.
Furthermore there is little sign of virus containment in many
important emerging economies, which in combination with the US,
represent around 40% of global air travel markets. Their continued
closure, particularly to international travel, is a significant
drag on recovery.
- Reduced corporate travel: Corporate travel
budgets are expected to be very constrained as companies continue
to be under financial pressure even as the economy improves. In
addition, while historically GDP growth and air travel have been
highly correlated, surveys suggest this link has weakened,
particularly with regard to business travel, as video conferencing
appears to have made significant inroads as a substitute for
in-person meetings.
- Weak consumer confidence: While pent-up demand
exists for VFR (visiting friends and relatives) and leisure
travel, consumer confidence is weak in the face of concerns over
job security and rising unemployment, as well as risks of catching
COVID19. Some 55% of respondents to IATA’s June passenger survey
don’t plan to travel in 2020.
Owing to these factors, IATA’s revised baseline
forecast is for global enplanements to fall 55% in 2020 compared
to 2019 (the April forecast was for a 46% decline). Passenger
numbers are expected to rise 62% in 2021 off the depressed 2020
base, but still will be down almost 30% compared to 2019. A full
recovery to 2019 levels is not expected until 2023, one year later
than previously forecast.
Meanwhile, since domestic markets are opening
ahead of international markets, and because passengers appear to
prefer short haul travel in the current environment, RPKs will
recover more slowly, with passenger traffic expected to return to
2019 levels in 2024, one year later than previously forecast.
Scientific advances in fighting COVID19 including development of
a successful vaccine, could allow a faster recovery. However, at
present there appears to be more downside risk than upside to the
baseline forecast.
“Passenger traffic hit bottom in April, but the
strength of the upturn has been very weak. What improvement we
have seen has been domestic flying. International markets remain
largely closed. Consumer confidence is depressed and not helped by
the UK’s weekend decision to impose a blanket quarantine on all
travelers returning from Spain. And in many parts of the world
infections are still rising. All of this points to a longer
recovery period and more pain for the industry and the global
economy,” said Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s Director General and
CEO.
“For airlines, this is bad news that points to the
need for governments to continue with relief measures—financial
and otherwise. A full Northern Winter season waiver on the 80-20
use-it-or-lose it slot rule, for example, would provide critical
relief to airlines in planning schedules amid unpredictable demand
patterns. Airlines are planning their schedules. They need to keep
sharply focused on meeting demand and not meeting slot rules that
were never meant to accommodate the sharp fluctuations of a
crisis. The earlier we know the slot rules the better, but we are
still waiting for governments in key markets to confirm a waiver,”
de Juniac added.
June international traffic shrank by 96.8%
compared to June 2019, only slightly improved over a 98.3% decline
in May, year-over-year. Capacity fell 93.2% and load factor
contracted 44.7 percentage points to 38.9%.
Asia-Pacific airlines’ June traffic plummeted
97.1% compared to the year-ago period, little improved from the
98.1% decline in May. Capacity fell 93.4% and load factor shrank
45.8 percentage points to 35.6%.
European carriers saw demand topple 96.7% in June
versus a year ago, compared to a 98.7% decline in May. Capacity
dropped 94.4% and load factor lessened 35.7 percentage points to
52.0%.
Middle Eastern airlines traffic collapsed 96.1%
for June against June 2019, compared with a 97.7% demand drop in
May. Capacity contracted 91.1%, and load factor crumbled to 33.3%,
down 43.1% percentage points compared to a year ago.
North American carriers had a 97.2% traffic
decline in June, barely improved from a 98.3% decline in May.
Capacity fell 92.8%, and load factor dropped 53.8 percentage
points to 34.1%.
Latin American airlines suffered a 96.6% demand
drop in June compared to the same month last year, from a 98.1%
drop in May. Capacity fell 95.7% and load factor sagged 17.7
percentage points to 66.2%, which was the highest among the
regions.
African airlines’ traffic sank 98.1% in June,
little changed from a 98.6% demand drop in May. Capacity
contracted 84.5%, and load factor dived 62.1 percentage points to
just 8.9% of seats filled, lowest among regions.
Domestic Passenger Markets
Domestic traffic demand fell 67.6% in June,
improved from a 78.4% decline in May. Capacity fell 55.9% and load
factor dropped 22.8 percentage points to 62.9%.
China’s carriers continued to lead the recovery,
with traffic down 35.5% in June compared to the year-ago period,
raised from a 46.3% decline in May.
Japan’s airlines saw improved domestic demand
after the state of COVID19 emergency was lifted in late May.
Domestic RPKs fell by 74.9% year-on-year in June, compared with
around 90% annual declines in the previous two months.
“Domestic traffic improvements notwithstanding,
international traffic, which in normal times accounts for close to
two-thirds of global air travel, remains virtually non-existent.
Most countries are still closed to international arrivals or have
imposed quarantines, that have the same effect as an outright
lockdown. Summer — our industry’s busiest season — is passing by
rapidly; with little chance for an upswing in international air
travel unless governments move quickly and decisively to find
alternatives to border closures, confidence-destroying stop-start
re-openings and demand-killing quarantine,” said de Juniac.
IATA urges governments to implement a layer of
measures including the International Civil Aviation Organization’s
(ICAO’s) global guidelines for restoring air connectivity
contained in ICAO’s Takeoff: Guidance for Air Travel through the
COVID19 Public Health Crisis. IATA also sees
potential for accurate, fast, scalable and affordable testing
measures and comprehensive contact tracing to play a role in
managing the risk of virus spread while re-connecting economies
and re-starting travel and tourism.
“We need to learn to manage
the risks of living with COVID19 with targeted and predictable
measures that will safely re-build traveler confidence and
shattered economies,” said de Juniac.
See also:
Airports, Air Travel and COVID19 - Exclusive Interview with
SITA's President of Asia Pacific, Sumesh Patel.
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