Preliminary traffic figures from the Association of
Asia Pacific Airlines (AAPA) show that airline operations in
January 2021 remained depressed as the spread of COVID19 variants
resulted in tighter border restrictions in international as well
as domestic markets across the world.
Meanwhile, air cargo demand keeps improving as
world trade starts to gain renewed momentum.
Asia Pacific airlines carried a combined total of
1.3 million international passengers in January, just 3.9% of the
same month last year when 33.5 million passengers flew on the
region’s carriers. Offered seat capacity was 12.1% of the January
2020 volume, while the international passenger load factor
averaged 27% for the month, a significant 54 percentage point
decline from the 81% achieved in the corresponding month last
year, when traffic volumes were still relatively unaffected by the
ongoing global COVID19 pandemic.
Growth in the e-commerce sector in the midst of
further recovery in the global manufacturing sector lent support
to air cargo markets. In January 2021, air cargo demand as
measured in freight tonne kilometres (FTK) recorded a marginal
increase of 0.3%, the first year-on-year growth in many months,
partly boosted by higher demand for air shipments ahead of the
Lunar New Year celebrations. Offered freight capacity fell by 25%
year-on-year, reflecting the prevailing capacity crunch as a
result of the decline in passenger bellyhold space. The
international freight load factor averaged 71.6%, an 18 percentage
point increase compared to the same month last year.
AAPA Director General, Mr. Subhas Menon,
said, “Renewed efforts to contain COVID19 through lockdowns and
border restrictions have again affected international passenger
demand, which remains close to a standstill. The uneven roll-out of vaccinations across
the world will only delay the full reopening of borders. In this
extremely challenging operating environment, airlines are
struggling to survive. While some airlines are receiving financial
support, further assistance would be needed for most airlines to
stay afloat, given that international borders remain largely
shuttered.
“Meanwhile, the industry is working with several
stakeholders to prepare the ground for the sustained resumption of
air travel, notably on contactless digitalized tools and passenger
facilitation protocols to ensure a safe and seamless journey for
travelers. The Asia Pacific aviation industry is committed to
playing its part in the COVID19 pandemic, through the carriage of
time-sensitive cargo supplies especially vaccines, and the safe
repatriation of residents.”
See latest
Travel Industry News,
Video
Interviews,
Podcasts
and other
news regarding:
COVID19,
AAPA,
FTK,
Traffic,
Cargo,
Freight.
Headlines: |
|
|