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December Premium Air Traffic Down More Than 13 Percent

By Brett Snyder | Feb 19, 2009

I’m sure nobody is surprised to hear that in December, premium air traffic numbers continued their downward slide. Year over year, premium traffic was off 13.3 percent, worse than an 11.5 percent November decline. The drop in the last few months of 2008 has been stunning. I’ll let the graph speak for itself.


[Graph from IATA]

Some of this can be attributed to capacity decreases, but a great deal of it is due to severely weakening demand. And while impact is now being felt across the board, Asia is really taking the biggest hit. Premium travel over the North Pacific is down 19.7 percent year over year. Meanwhile, the North Atlantic is down only 8.8 percent. Domestic premium traffic was down 7.7 percent.

It appears that these numbers will continue to fall for now, and the pain will continue. The benefit of lower fuel prices still outweighs the loss in revenue, but it’s certainly an alarming trend regardless.

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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Web Buzz:
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    ATW Daily News - 329 days 7 hours 29 minutes ago

    Premium traffic continued its dive in January, with passengers flying on first or business class tickets declining 16.7% year-over-year, a drop that followed a 13.3% dip in December, IATA said yesterday, warning that "the bottom for the decline in premium travel numbers is not yet in sight." In a Premium Traffic Monitor released yesterday, IATA...

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    BNET Industries - 399 days 15 hours 30 minutes ago

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    Dallas Morning News - 67 days 14 hours 12 minutes ago

    The nation's nine largest airlines filled 79.4 percent of their seats in November, up 3.6 percentage points from a year earlier. Southwest Airlines recorded the biggest jump in load factors as it filled 76.5 percent of its seats - 13.3 points higher than in November 2008. The 76.5 percent, although lowest for the nine carriers, represents a...

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