Middle East carriers’ traffic growth slowed to 4.9 per cent in March: IATA

Business Saturday 06/May/2017 16:26 PM
By: Times News Service
Middle East carriers’ traffic growth slowed to 4.9 per cent in March: IATA

Muscat: Traffic growth of Middle East carriers slowed down to 4.9 per cent in March compared to a year ago, which was a considerable decline from January and February year-over-year demand growth, the latest IATA report revealed.
This is related to the developments seen last year, while any impact from the laptop ban will be visible from April results onwards, the International Air Transport Association (IATA) said in its new report.
Overall, however, the region has seen the fastest year-on-year growth in international revenue passenger kilometres (RPKs) so far this year, with robust growth on routes to and from Asia and Europe. Capacity increased 9.4 per cent, and load factor dropped 3.1 percentage points to 73.1 per cent, the report said.
The IATA’s report also revealed that the global passenger traffic results for March 2017 showed demand in RPKs rose 6.8 per cent, compared to the same month a year ago.
Capacity grew 6.1 per cent and load factor climbed by half a percentage point to 80.4 per cent, which was a record for the month. March demand growth represented a moderate slowdown relative to performance in February after adjusting for the distortion in the year-to-year comparisons owing to the extra day in February 2016. The imposition of the ban on large electronics in the cabin on certain routes to the United States and the United Kingdom occurred too late in March to affect traffic figures.
“Strong traffic demand continued throughout the first quarter, supported by a combination of lower fares and a broad-based upturn in global economic conditions. The price of air travel has fallen by around 10 per cent in real terms over the past year, and that has contributed to record load factors. We will have to wait another month to see the impact of the laptop ban on demand,” said Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s Director-General and CEO.
International passenger demand rose 6.4 per cent in March this year compared to March 2016, which was a slight deceleration compared to February, after adjusting for the leap year distortion in February. Airlines in all regions recorded growth. The total capacity climbed 6.1 per cent, and load factor improved 0.2 per cent percentage points to 78.8 per cent.
European carriers saw March traffic climb 5.7 per cent over March 2016. The strong upward trend in part is supported by momentum in the region’s economy. However, wide variation in performance exists among market segments. Demand across the Atlantic has grown only modestly, while RPKs flown on routes to and from Asia and the Middle East are up by around 7 to 9 per cent. March capacity rose 4.7 per cent and load factor edged up 0.8 percentage points to 82.2 per cent, highest among regions.
Asia-Pacific airlines’ traffic jumped 9.1 per cent in March, compared to the year-ago period. Capacity increased 7.4 per cent, and load factor rose 1.2 percentage points to 78.7 per cent. Growth within the Asia region is solid, while traffic on the Asia-Europe route has continued to recover strongly from terrorism-related disruption in early-2016. Demand has risen at an annualised rate of 22 per cent since November.
North American airlines posted a 2.7 per cent traffic rise in March compared to the year-ago period. Capacity climbed 3.7 per cent and load factor slipped 0.7 percentage points to 79.8 per cent. Passenger traffic has trended sideways in seasonally-adjusted terms since July 2016, alongside a similar trend in capacity.
Latin American airlines had a 9.7 per cent increase in March traffic, which was the strongest among the regions. This was just the second time in 63 months that Latin American airlines led the industry. Strong demand is being supported by robust international demand within South America. By contrast, passenger traffic on the larger North-South America route is nearly 5 per cent below its mid-2015 peak. March capacity climbed 6.4 per cent compared to a year ago, and load factor surged 2.4 percentage points to 80.7 per cent.
African airlines continued to enjoy good demand, with traffic up 6 per cent compared to March 2016. Capacity rose 2.4 per cent, and load factor strengthened 2.3 percentage points to 68.2 per cent. Notwithstanding fragility in the region’s biggest economies (Nigeria and South Africa), traffic growth has strengthened in recent months with RPKs growing at an annualised pace of nearly 10 per cent since mid-2016. This pick-up reflects a combination of faster growth on the key market to and from Europe, and between Africa and the Middle East.
Domestic passenger markets
Domestic demand rose 7.6 per cent in March. This was driven primarily by double-digit traffic increases in China, India and Russia, supported by strong single-digit growth in Japan. Domestic capacity climbed 6.1 per cent, and load factor lifted 1.2 percentage points to 83.2 per cent.
Brazil’s domestic market continues to recover and returned to positive year-over-year growth in March for the first time since July 2015.
Japan’s domestic traffic growth hit a three-year high in March, continuing the ongoing recovery since spring 2016.This has come alongside an increase in the number of domestic routes flown (albeit with lower average flight frequencies).
The bottom line
“The first quarter results are strong. However, the last weeks have been challenging to the passenger business.The laptop ban—implemented with next to no notice, no dialogue and no coordination — is testing public confidence in how governments and industry work together to keep flying secure. So, even as rumours persist that the ban will be expanded to other airports and regions, we are calling on governments to work with the industry to find alternativesto keep flying secure without causing great inconvenience to our passengers,” said de Juniac.
Concurrently, the recent incident at United Airlines has created calls for more heavy-handed government oversight. “Everyone, including United, agrees there is no justification for what happened to passenger Dr. David Dao. United Airlines CEO Oscar Munoz has apologised repeatedly and is taking steps to ensure there is never a repeat.
“The video was so shocking that it would be easy for lawmakers and regulators to get caught up in this groundswell of outrage and take steps to limit overselling of flights. However, the management of overbooking has actually worked well for decades. It ensures that scarce capacity is efficiently utilised; we see that in today’s record load factors. Overbooking helps airlines avoid empty seats, and that helps to keep costsand fareslow. Governments have acknowledged that this ultimately benefits consumers. If industry-level change is discussed, let’s make sure that there is a transparent fact-based dialogue between industry and regulators. We must be careful to not risk undoing the many benefits unleashed by the competitive forces of deregulation,” said deJuniac.