Passenger Traffic Growth
Slows, Freight Remains Flat
The
International Air Transport Association (IATA) today released industry
traffic results for the first 10 months of 2005 showing a weakening
trend for both cargo and passenger traffic.
October passenger traffic grew
6.0% compared to the same month in the previous year. This is
considerably slower than the 7.9% recorded for the January-October
period and is the slowest single-month growth recorded since January
2004. October load factor was 74.8%. Middle Eastern carriers led October
growth at 15.1%. North American carriers posted October growth of 5.5%,
sharply down from the 9.1% recorded in year-on-year comparisons
September.
Cargo traffic in October was
nearly flat at 1.1%, while year-to-date growth for January-October
recorded a 2.6% increase. This is well below the 13.4% growth recorded
for 2004. Middle-Eastern carriers recorded the strongest October growth
at 16.8%. Asian carriers saw October growth of 0.2% while North American
and European carriers saw declines of 0.5% and 0.1% respectively.
Giovanni Bisignani, IATA's
Director General and CEO said, "Slowing growth will continue to make the
operating environment difficult. There has been some respite in the
slight decline of fuel prices in recent weeks. But we are still facing
a fuel bill of US$97 billion this year-more than double what it was only
two years ago. Continued improvement in cost efficiency remains
critical. This will become all the more urgent as the high price of oil
broadens its impact on consumer confidence and production." |