Khaleej Times

‘Irrepressi­ble’ air travel defies global economic growth fall

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montreal — For all the world’s economic malaise, there’s a bright spot above the clouds: Airline passenger traffic grew 6.4 per cent last year, the most in five years.

Total passengers rose across all major regions to 7.2 billion, almost the population of the planet, according to Airports Council Internatio­nal, the industry’s Montreal-based trade associatio­n. And as with the global economy, China is a dominant force for growth.

Asia-Pacific airports handled the most, with trips up 8.6 per cent to 2.46 billion, while the Middle East increased the fastest, climbing 9.6 per cent to 334 million.

“Growth in passenger traffic approached the pre-recessiona­ry growth levels that were seen in 2004 to 2007,” ACI said in its annual report. “Internatio­nal tourism in particular was irrepressi­ble in 2015, even considerin­g the geopolitic­al risks that persisted in certain parts of the world, such as Eastern Europe and the Middle East.”

While the BRICS economies — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — have faced their own varying challenges, they still postedstro­ng growth of 8.2 per cent in passenger traffic last year and their 1.5 billion passengers accounted for 21.4 per cent of global traffic, ACI said.

One of the biggest driving forces has been China. There, Beijing’s airport held the No 2 rank with passengers up 4.4 per cent to 89.9 million last year, trailing Atlanta’s 5.5 per cent increase to 101.5 million.

“On the back of a growing middle class in key emerging markets, the significan­t growth of interconti­nental hubs in Asia-Pacific and the Middle East reveals that air transport’s nucleus continues to move eastward,” ACI said in its roundup. “Despite the slowing of economic growth in China, its move away from an investment-led economy to a consumptio­n-driven economy will further stimulate air transport demand over the long run.”

To be sure, threats to air travel growth include geopolitic­al unrest and terrorism plus bottleneck­s if the physical capacity of transport infrastruc­ture doesn’t keep up, ACI Director General Angela Gittens said in the report. She warned of “protection­ist policies that retreat from further economic integratio­n,” echoing concerns voiced at the Group of 20 leaders summit this month in China. — Bloomberg

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