TheLocalYokel
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Re: Passenger Figures
May 2009
The trend continues with Bristol down 17.3% at 489,545 passengers handled in May compared with May 2008. This can be said to be almost entirely due to the reduction in atms compared with a year ago that are down 17.5%.
The rolling 12-month figure is 5,771,520, down 6.5% on a year ago. You have to go back to 2007 to find a rolling 12-month period as low as this.
The other airports in the 5-6 million bracket, although they are all rapidly slipping into the 4-5 million bracket, are Belfast International, Liverpool, East Midlands and Newcastle.
Broadly speaking they seem to be faring similarly to Bristol.
Their May 2009 and rolling 12-month figures and percentages are as follows:
East Midlands - 435,427, down 18.5% 5,159,982 down 8.6%
Liverpool - 426,366 down 12.1% 5,001,491 down 8.6%
Belfast Int - 401,188 down 16.2% 4,961,887 down 5.4%
Newcastle 435,702 down 7% 4,790,534 down 11.6%
Picking out one or two items at random at BRS, the CO EWR service continues to disappoint with passenger numbers. May 2009 saw only 7,439 passengers on the route (ave load 120, load factor 69%), down 12% on May 2008. When one considers that 2008 was down over 3% on 2007 for these years in total it must concern both airline and airport that in the first five months of 2009 the number of passengers flown is down 13% on the first five months of 2008.
A brighter note saw nearly 20,000 flying to Amsterdam, 9% down on May 2008, but this summer KLM has reduced rotations to 3 per weekday from 4 last year. The daily easyJet remains so, assuming the easyJet loads were roughly the same in 08 and 09, it will mean the KLM load factors have increased significantly.
Perhaps one less international hub from Bristol this summer (Frankfurt) has benefited this route. Ryanair also flies to Eindhoven three times a week (route started at end of March) and it can be assumed that this took away at least a few of the AMS customers. The FR route, as I expected, isn't doing well with loads. Average for May was 88 (load factor 46%) which is actually a bit better than I anticipated.
Some charter routes are horrendous - Sharm el Sheikh was down 73%, solely because last year there were four weekly flights, this year only one. Well, actually a second one is due to start at the beginning of July but this is still a tremendous reduction in seat numbers.
Turkey is better with 18,500 flown to the three Turkish destinations which is up around 18% on May 2008 when there were four destinations (no Izmir this year).
May 2009
The trend continues with Bristol down 17.3% at 489,545 passengers handled in May compared with May 2008. This can be said to be almost entirely due to the reduction in atms compared with a year ago that are down 17.5%.
The rolling 12-month figure is 5,771,520, down 6.5% on a year ago. You have to go back to 2007 to find a rolling 12-month period as low as this.
The other airports in the 5-6 million bracket, although they are all rapidly slipping into the 4-5 million bracket, are Belfast International, Liverpool, East Midlands and Newcastle.
Broadly speaking they seem to be faring similarly to Bristol.
Their May 2009 and rolling 12-month figures and percentages are as follows:
East Midlands - 435,427, down 18.5% 5,159,982 down 8.6%
Liverpool - 426,366 down 12.1% 5,001,491 down 8.6%
Belfast Int - 401,188 down 16.2% 4,961,887 down 5.4%
Newcastle 435,702 down 7% 4,790,534 down 11.6%
Picking out one or two items at random at BRS, the CO EWR service continues to disappoint with passenger numbers. May 2009 saw only 7,439 passengers on the route (ave load 120, load factor 69%), down 12% on May 2008. When one considers that 2008 was down over 3% on 2007 for these years in total it must concern both airline and airport that in the first five months of 2009 the number of passengers flown is down 13% on the first five months of 2008.
A brighter note saw nearly 20,000 flying to Amsterdam, 9% down on May 2008, but this summer KLM has reduced rotations to 3 per weekday from 4 last year. The daily easyJet remains so, assuming the easyJet loads were roughly the same in 08 and 09, it will mean the KLM load factors have increased significantly.
Perhaps one less international hub from Bristol this summer (Frankfurt) has benefited this route. Ryanair also flies to Eindhoven three times a week (route started at end of March) and it can be assumed that this took away at least a few of the AMS customers. The FR route, as I expected, isn't doing well with loads. Average for May was 88 (load factor 46%) which is actually a bit better than I anticipated.
Some charter routes are horrendous - Sharm el Sheikh was down 73%, solely because last year there were four weekly flights, this year only one. Well, actually a second one is due to start at the beginning of July but this is still a tremendous reduction in seat numbers.
Turkey is better with 18,500 flown to the three Turkish destinations which is up around 18% on May 2008 when there were four destinations (no Izmir this year).