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International Air Traffic Disappears in September

By Brett Snyder | Oct 27, 2008

It was less than a month ago that I wrote about softening international August traffic numbers. Now September numbers are out, and they are downright ugly. IATA calls them “alarming,” and sadly this may just be the beginning.

Looking at August numbers we were getting anxious that traffic (measured by revenue passenger kilometers) was up only 1.3% year over year. Well, in September, traffic actually declined 2.9% and cargo dropped a precipitous 7.7%. Remember that relatively robust 5.2% growth in international traffic for American carriers? This month, it dropped to a negative 0.9%. Even Middle Eastern traffic was down 2.8%.

On the capacity side, available seat kilometers were actually up 1.1% thanks to growth from Asian and Middle Eastern carriers. All those A380s heading for the Middle East aren’t looking so hot right now. In fact, the Middle East had the lowest load factor of the group, and was the only one to fall below 70%. It was 69.5%.

This slowdown will likely hit American carriers particularly hard. They had been fleeing from domestic flights into the international world. But now that the international world is seeing dramatic slowing, it will certainly make it more challenging for American carriers to continue to sustain their capacity overseas.

In addition to writing BNET's travel industry blog, Brett Snyder also pens the award-winning consumer travel blog, Cranky Flier. You can follow him on Twitter under the name crankyflier.

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    1

    danwebb

    10/27/08 | Report as spam

    RE: International Air Traffic Disappears in September

    I wonder if lower oil prices (if they stabilize around this level or even $10-$20) will have any effect on the huge order books of Emirates and some of the other Middle Eastern carriers.

  •  
    2

    danwebb

    10/27/08 | Report as spam

    RE: International Air Traffic Disappears in September

    Whoops...meant $10-$20 higher than where they are now.

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    3

    brett snyder

    10/28/08 | Report as spam

    RE: International Air Traffic Disappears in September

    I'm not sure that will impact the Emirates order book. My understanding is that's not a big oil country anyway, and everything I've seen is that they're still very bullish. But I'm with you on this one in that if wealth disappears from the region, it's going to hurt. And Emirates has a LOT of those A380s on order. Of course, Qatar, Etihad, etc are growing quickly as well and traffic appears to be falling. The collapse of the Indian market can't help either since that's a big market for them. So it will be interesting to see what happens.

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