Times of Oman

Dubai airport projects growth in traffic

-

DUBAI: Dubai Internatio­nal Airport expects double-digit passenger growth to resume as early as 2019, helped by an alliance between the emirate’s two airlines, its chief executive said on Monday after reporting the lowest growth in at least nine years.

Passengers using the airport, the hub for Middle East airline giant Emirates and a major source of income for Dubai, rose 5.5 per cent to 88.2 million in 2017. It was the slowest growth since at least 2009, according to Reuters calculatio­ns. For the month of December alone, passenger traffic increased by only 1.9 per cent from a year earlier to 7.9 million. Among other factors, the Gulf ’s economic slowdown because of low oil prices has dented the region’s travel industry.

This year the airport projects growth of only about 2.4 per cent to 90.3 million passengers. But CEO Paul Griffiths said a partnershi­p struck between Emirates and flydubai last year to develop a closer commercial relationsh­ip would help them to expand and thus boost business at the airport. “We are pretty confident we will return to double-digit growth by 2019-2020,” Griffiths said in an interview at the airport.

Dubai Internatio­nal, the world’s busiest airport for internatio­nal travellers, would need to handle about 99 million passengers in 2019 to reach double-digit growth. That would be its largest annual passenger increase since 2013.

Emirates currently accounts for 51 per cent of the airport’s passenger traffic and flydubai has 13.2 per cent. Flydubai could now operate some flights from Emirates’ Terminal 3, but most of its flights will stay at Terminal 2 after a study found it was not feasible to collocate the two airlines, Griffiths said.

He added that in the long term there is unlikely to be continuous double-digit growth because of capacity constraint­s, with the airport expected to reach a limit of 118 million passengers a year by 2023. Dubai became the world’s busiest for internatio­nal travellers in 2014, overtaking London’s Heathrow, and it believes it can overtake Beijing and Atlanta to become the world’s busiest overall in the next two to three years. Beijing Capital Internatio­nal handled 95.8 million passengers in 2017, while Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta handled 103.9 million. Dubai is also developing a second airport about 60km to the south. That airport, Al Maktoum Internatio­nal, will see a roughly fivefold increase in annual capacity this year to 26 million passengers. -

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman