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Friday, June 10, 2022

Air travels in Africa rose to 116% in 2022: IATA

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) says African airlines’ traffic rose to 116.2 per cent in April 2022 compared to a year ago.

• June 10, 2022
Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja
Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) says African airlines’ traffic rose to 116.2 per cent in April 2022 compared to a year ago, an acceleration over the 93.3 per cent year-over-year increase recorded in March 2022.

IATA’s director-general Willie Walsh said in a statement on Thursday that air travel continued to be in a strong recovery trend.

Mr Walsh explained that April 2022 capacity was up 65.7 per cent and load factor rose to 15.7 per cent points to 67.3 per cent.

The association announced that air travel resumed its strong recovery trend in April, despite the war in Ukraine and travel restrictions in China. It said this was driven primarily by international demand.

IATA also mentioned that a total demand for air travel in April 2022, as measured in Revenue Passenger Kilometres (RPKs) was up 78.7 per cent compared to April 2021 and slightly ahead of March 2022’s 76 per cent year-on-year increase.

According to IATA, with the lifting of many border restrictions, it is seeing the long-expected surge in bookings as people seek to make up for two years of lost travel opportunities.

“April data is cause for optimism in almost all markets, except China, which continues to severely restrict travel,” added IATA’s director general.

IATA said international RPKs rose 331.9 per cent versus April 2021, an acceleration over the 289.9 per cent rise in March 2022 compared to a year ago.

It noted that several route areas were above pre-pandemic levels, including Europe-Central America, Middle East-North America and North America-Central America.

However, April 2022 international RPKs were down 43.4 per cent compared to the same month in 2019.

Meanwhile, IATA said April domestic air travel was down one per cent compared to the year-ago period, a reversal from the 10.6 per cent demand rise in March, driven entirely by continuing strict travel restrictions in China, where domestic traffic was down 80.8 per cent year-on-year.

Overall, April domestic traffic was down 25.8 per cent versus April 2019, it added.

(NAN)

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