The Manila Times

Dubai Intl Airport had 86.9M passengers

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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates: The number of passengers flying through Dubai Internatio­nal Airport, the world’s busiest for internatio­nal travel, surged last year beyond its total for 2019 — just before the coronaviru­s pandemic grounded global aviation.

While still shy of its all-time high in 2018, the figures for 2023 showed just how far the airport known as DXB has bounced back from the pandemic. The number of passengers passing through its cavernous, air-conditione­d terminals, home to the long-haul carrier Emirates in Dubai, has served as a barometer for the aviation industry worldwide and the wider economic health of this city-state.

Overall in 2023, the airport had 86.9 million passengers. The airport’s 2019 annual traffic was 86.3 million passengers. The airport had 89.1 million passengers in 2018 — its busiest-ever year before the pandemic, while 66 million passengers passed through in 2022.

Paul Griffiths, the CEO of Dubai Airports, made the announceme­nt Monday on the state-owned radio station Dubai Eye.

Passenger traffic largely has been driven by the airport’s standard travel destinatio­ns — India, Saudi Arabia, the United Kingdom and Pakistan. Russia has also been a major market, as Dubai remains one of the few places still open to Russians during Moscow’s war on Ukraine.

Dubai was among the first cities to reopen to tourists in the pandemic.

That helped boost the city-state’s tourism industry, as attraction­s like the Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building, and the sail-shaped Burj Al-Arab luxury hotel drew both visitors and transit passengers out of airport lounges.

Earlier in February, Dubai announced its best-ever tourism numbers, saying it hosted 17.15 million internatio­nal overnight visitors in 2023. Average hotel occupancy stood at around 77 percent. Meanwhile, its boom-and-bust real estate market remains on a hot streak, nearing alltime high valuations.

The airport has estimated it will serve 88.8 million passengers this year — nearing its all-time high. But that will put increasing pressure on the already-stretched airport, which had its highest-ever number of aircraft takeoffs and landings in a single year — 416,405.

Dubai has a second airport, Al Maktoum Internatio­nal Airport at Dubai World Central, some 45 kilometers (28 miles) away in its far southern reaches. While used by commercial airlines when Qatar hosted the 2022 FIFA World Cup, the second airport that opened in 2010 largely sees cargo and private aircraft flights. Plans to put Emirates and other major carriers there have been repeatedly pushed off.

Dubai Internatio­nal Airport connects to 262 destinatio­ns in 104 countries worldwide via just over 100 internatio­nal carriers.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? BUSIEST
Passengers leave the baggage handling hall at the Dubai Internatio­nal Airport terminal 3, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, on Oct. 25, 2022. The number of passengers passing through Dubai Internatio­nal Airport, increased in 2023, according to officials on Monday, Feb. 19, 2024.
AP PHOTO BUSIEST Passengers leave the baggage handling hall at the Dubai Internatio­nal Airport terminal 3, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, on Oct. 25, 2022. The number of passengers passing through Dubai Internatio­nal Airport, increased in 2023, according to officials on Monday, Feb. 19, 2024.

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