Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Thursday, August 09 2012 - 04:59
AsiaNet
August's North American Air Traffic At Lowest Level In 10 Years, Says OAG
CHICAGO, Aug. 9, 2012 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

                    - Region loses nearly a million seats

     Scheduled flight operations within North America will be at their lowest 
August level for 10 years, according to the latest statistics from flight 
schedule data market leader OAG (http://www.oag.com), a UBM Aviation brand.

     (Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20110908/NY64578LOGO )

     The OAG FACTS (Frequency and Capacity Trend Statistics) 
(http://www.oagaviation.com/OAG-FACTS/2012/August-Executive-Summary) for August 
2012 reveals that this month there will be 953,083 fewer air seats offered 
within North America compared with August 2011, with 21,401 fewer flights. For 
the year to date, decreases of two per cent in flights and one per cent in seat 
capacity have been experienced compared with the first eight months of 2011.

     "Against the backdrop of a slowing economy the North American region is 
experiencing general consolidation of its internal scheduled air services," 
said Rob Shaw, Director Analytics.

     "This is partly the natural consequence of the well-publicised airline 
mergers of recent years, but it also reflects the strategy of individual 
carriers in a tough trading environment: reducing capacity to maintain fares at 
a profitable level."

    Only three of North America's top 10 hubs (San Francisco at 7%, Charlotte 
at 5% and Toronto at 4%) will show significant growth in seat capacity this 
month, while capacity at Chicago O'Hare will drop by three per cent.

     Middle East shows fastest long-haul growth with Dubai the key hub 
North America's flights and seats to and from other worldwide regions will both 
show a two per cent increase in August, offering some better news, but the 
biggest growth in long-haul traffic is seen in the Middle East - driven largely 
by the United Arab Emirates and Dubai in particular.

     This month will see flight operations to and from the Middle East grow by 
seven per cent to 64,252, while seat capacity will increase by eight per cent 
to reach 14,219,564 - nearly 4,000 more flights and more than a million more 
seats offered than in August 2011. Traffic within the Middle East region is 
also expected to grow by four per cent (flights) and three per cent (seats).

     The Middle East region's key hubs are all experiencing strong year-on-year 
growth in August, with Abu Dhabi seeing seats increasing by 248,896 (up 17%), 
Doha by 244,470 (11%) and Bahrain by 114,560 (11%). By far the strongest 
performer in the region however is Dubai, with 782,544 additional seats and 
2,694 additional flight operations compared with August 2011.

     "Strategically, the Middle East is growing in importance all the time, 
particularly in terms of its links with Western Europe," said Rob Shaw, 
Director Analytics.

     "While capacity reductions are continuing on several key routes between 
Western Europe and the Asia-Pacific region, more than 400,000 extra seats are 
now offered between Western Europe and the Middle East. Of these, more than 70 
per cent are on services to and from Dubai and Abu Dhabi, largely reflecting 
the continued expansion plans of the premier Gulf-based airlines."

     Global flights up by 1% and seats by 3% 
     Dubai, with its 12 per cent increase in flight operations and 14 per cent 
increase in seat capacity, is also showing the fastest growth among the major 
global air hubs.

      Seat capacity at eight of the world's top 10 airports will grow this 
month. Beijing's year-on-year increase of eight per cent brings it ever closer 
to Atlanta as the world's largest hub in terms of seats offered, while Tokyo's 
offering increased by nearly 375,000 seats, up five per cent on August 2011, 
securing its status as the world's fourth-largest hub after London-Heathrow.

     Worldwide, airlines have increased flights by 16,948 and seats by 
9,608,208, taking the total scheduled flight operations for August 2012 to 
2,789,437 and the total of seats offered to 361,193,356. This represents growth 
of one per cent in flights but three per cent in seats, which is explained by 
the increased use of larger aircraft. Average aircraft seat capacity is 129 
this month compared with 127 in August 2011.

     For the year to date, scheduled flights show a growth of two per cent and 
seat capacity an increase of three per cent compared with the January-August 
period last year.

     A detailed review of OAG FACTS 
     (http://www.oagaviation.com/OAG-FACTS/2012/August-Executive-Summary) for 
August 2012 - including information, commentary and charts about specific 
airports, routes, countries and regions worldwide - is available to download 
now at http://www.oagaviation.com/OAG-FACTS/2012/August-Executive-Summary. 

     OAG FACTS is updated on a monthly basis and provides a visual snapshot of 
airline activity around the world, using interactive graphs to display 10-year 
performance trends, sourced from OAG's consolidated database of global airline 
schedules.

     Notes to Editors: 
     OAG (http://www.oag.com), a UBM Aviation (http://www.ubmaviation.com) 
brand, is the trusted source for aviation information and analytical services. 
OAG's leading aviation databases are unrivalled in their scale, accuracy and 
comprehensiveness and are integral to the world's aviation industry operations. 
For more information, visit: http://www.oag.com.

     SOURCE:  OAG

    CONTACT: Sarah Dixon
             UBM Aviation
             Product Marketing Director
             +44-(0)-1582-600-111
             pressoffice@ubmaviation.com; or

             Marc Cornelius, 
             80:20 Communications
             +44-(0)-1483-447380
             mcornelius@8020comms.com 
Translations

Japanese