In October 2009, airline passenger demand was up
0.5% when compared to the same month last year. Demand for
international cargo rose to 0.5% below previous year levels which
is significantly better than the 5.4% decline recorded in
September. Load factors for passenger and cargo continue at
pre-recession levels of 78% and 54.1% respectively.
The
improvement that started since passenger traffic hit bottom in
March is similar to the pace of growth in 2006 and 2007. Without
an exaggerated rebound from pent-up demand, there will be no rapid
catch-up to the growth trend established in the 2005 to early-2008
period. “The crisis has cost the industry two years of growth.
Adjusting costs and capacity to meet that reality will be
challenging,” said Giovanni Bisignani, IATA’s Director General and
CEO.
The improvement in load factors to pre-recession
levels is largely the result of careful capacity management.
Compared to October 2008, overall passenger capacity on offer was
down 3.3%. Stripping out seasonal fluctuations, passenger capacity
has been essentially flat throughout 2009. Responding to the
precipitous fall in cargo demand, October cargo capacity was 7.4%
below the previous year’s levels.
Cargo capacity
adjustments have come with many freighters being put into storage
or retired, resulting in a fleet reduction of 4.9%. In contrast,
the passenger fleet continues to expand by 1.8% as new deliveries
more than offset those being stored or retired. Aircraft
utilization for both wide and narrow-body aircraft is now 6% below
early 2008 levels. This low asset utilization is increasing
operating costs.
International Scheduled Passenger
Demand
Passenger demand is now 6% better than the low point
reached in March 2009, but 5% below the peak recorded in early
2008. Compared to September, seasonally adjusted passenger
volumes rose by 0.8%. Carriers in all regions except
Asia Pacific, the Middle East and North America saw improved demand in
October compared to September.
Asia Pacific carriers saw
demand grow 0.9%, lower than the 2.1% recorded in September. The
carriers in this region, together with the European carriers, have
seen demand rise the most from their low points.
While
European carriers saw a demand decline of 3% in October, it is an
improvement from the -4.2% in September. European carriers demand
is still below the levels from last year due to weakness across
the Atlantic and within Europe.
North American carriers saw
significant growth in international traffic through the middle of
2009. Very significant capacity cuts across both the Atlantic and
Pacific have reduced traffic carried in October to -2.6% below
2008 levels.
Middle Eastern carriers saw demand grow 14.3%
(compared to 18.2% in September), the highest among the regions.
The region’s carriers continue to add capacity, increasing 15.3%
in October and outpacing the growth in demand.
Latin American
carriers saw significant increases in the demand for air travel,
growing 9% compared to 3.4% in September. The region’s carriers
continue to add capacity, growing 3.7% compared to 2008.
African carriers saw demand decline 2.6% in October, an
improvement from September’s -4.2%.
International Scheduled
Cargo Demand
Cargo traffic is 14% above the December 2008
low point, but remains 15% below the early 2008 peak. Compared
to September 2009, seasonally adjusted cargo volumes rose by 2.5%.
Carriers in all regions experienced improved demand conditions in
October compared to September.
European carriers saw the
biggest weakness in demand with a fall of 11.3% compared to
October 2008 - relatively unchanged from the 13% drop in
September. The region’s carriers were also the most aggressive in
adjusting capacity with a 12.4% cut compared to previous year
levels.
Middle Eastern carriers saw demand growth of 18.4%.
This is significantly better than the 3.6% growth experienced in
September and outpaced a capacity increase of 11.2%.
North
American carriers saw a 0.5% growth in demand against a 12% fall
in capacity.
Latin American carriers recorded a 6.7% growth,
significantly higher than the 1.8% in September.
Carriers in
Asia Pacific saw demand grow 1.9% compared to -3.1% in September.
The region’s carriers have benefited from the air freight generated by the earlier and stronger economic revival in the
region, with industrial production now rising strongly in a number
of economies.
African carriers saw demand decline 3.8%, an
improvement from the -6.9% in September.
“This recession is
re-emphasizing a structural weakness in the industry. The
inability to merge across political borders has created a
hyper-fragmented industry. The industry is financially sick, and
the medicine of cross-border consolidation is off limits due to an
archaic regulatory structure. Market forces should guide our
commercial operations. Instead the bilateral system, established
in the 1940’s, puts governments in control of which markets can be
served and limits access to global capital with ownership
restrictions. No other industry faces such regulatory manacles,”
said Bisignani.
Earlier this month, Chile, Malaysia,
Panama, Singapore, Switzerland, the US, the UAE, with the
endorsement of the European Commission, signed a multilateral
statement of policy principles focused on aviation liberalization.
These principles aim to promote normal commercial freedoms for
market access, access to capital (ownership) and pricing on a
level playing field. The economic impact of such liberalization
could add 0.86% to national GDPs according to studies by
InterVISTAS.
“Managing through this crisis will require all
commercial tools that every other industry takes for granted. The
principles have been developed by governments covering 60% of
global aviation. Now the challenge is two-fold. States that signed
need to apply the principles themselves while bringing more states
on board. The statement of policy principles is not a panacea, but
it is a historic step in the right direction at a critical time. A
financially sustainable aviation industry is a necessary catalyst
for the global economy,” Bisignani added.
See recent travel news from:
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IATA,
October 2009
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