Date: 6 December 2012
Airlines to welcome 3.6 billion passengers in 2016: IATA.
GENEVA, Switzerland - The International Air Transport
Association (IATA) released an industry traffic forecast showing that airlines
expect to welcome some 3.6 billion passengers in 2016. That’s about 800 million
more than the 2.8 billion passengers carried by airlines in 2011.
These figures are revealed in the IATA Airline Industry
Forecast 2012-2016. This industry consensus outlook for system-wide passenger
growth sees passenger numbers expanding by an average of 5.3% per annum between
2012 and 2016. The 28.5% increase in passenger numbers over the forecast period
will see almost 500 million new passengers traveling on domestic routes and 331
million new passengers on international services.
International freight volumes will grow at 3% per annum to
total 34.5 million tonnes in 2016. That is 4.8 million more tonnes of air cargo
than the 29.6 million tonnes carried in 2011.
The emerging economies of Asia-Pacific, Latin America and
the Middle East will see the strongest passenger growth. This will be led by
routes within or connected to China, which are expected to account for 193
million of the 831 million new passengers over the forecast period (159 million
on domestic routes and 34 million traveling internationally). Passenger growth
within the Asia-Pacific region (domestic and international) is expected to add
around 380 million passengers over the forecast period.
Through 2016, the United States will continue to be the
largest single market for domestic passengers (710.2 million). In the same
year, passengers on international routes connected to the United States will
total 223 million, making it the largest single market for international travel
as well. Reflecting the maturity of the United States market, growth rates
(2.6% for domestic and 4.3% for international) will be well below the
international average (5.3 % for international travel and 5.2% for domestic
traffic).
“Despite the current economic uncertainty, expected demand
for connectivity remains strong. That’s good news for the global economy.
Growing air transport links generate jobs and underpin economic growth in all
economies. But exploiting these will require governments to recognize
aviation’s value with policies that do not stifle innovation, tax regimes that
do not punish success and investments to enable infrastructure to keep up with
growth,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO. Globally, aviation
supports some 57 million jobs and $2.2 trillion in economic activity.
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