Aviation Industry Blog

Find airline news, aviation data analysis, bite-size infographics and thought leadership from industry experts on the OAG blog.

Blog

Middle East Aviation: Growth in the World’s Second-Fastest Growing Market

The Middle East has experienced an unparalleled era of growth, with airlines ...

Blog

African Aviation: Optimistic Signs of Market Growth, or Increasing Risk?

Welcome back to the last in our series of articles focused on the African ...

Blog

China Expands International Network but will Demand Follow?

The missing piece of the pandemic recovery jigsaw was the reopening of China ...

Blog

Middle East Aviation: New Aircraft Orders

Here is the last in our series of articles focused on the Middle East Aviation ...

Blog

Africa: Is Aviation Keeping Pace With Population Growth?

Welcome back to our African Aviation series. In the first blog post of this ...

Blog

Middle East Aviation: Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030

Welcome to the second article of a 3-part series exploring the Middle East ...

Blog

India’s Domestic Aviation: A Deep-Dive Into a Decade of Growth

This is the final blog post in a three-part series focused on India’s aviation ...

Blog

Ethiopian Airlines Leaves Kenya Airways Behind

Stand still in the airline industry and you will get left behind very quickly. ...

Blog

Middle East Aviation: A Constantly Climbing Market

This is the first article of a 3-part series exploring the Middle East Aviation ...

Blog

Indian Aviation: International Intentions and Hub Expansion

This is the second article in a series focused on India's aviation market. Our ...

Blog

Indian Aviation: The Next Decade

This article is the first in a series that will focus on India's aviation ...

Blog

Thailand Aims High in 2024 - But Can It Make It?

In 2024, Thailand is aiming for 40 million international arrivals, which would ...

Blog

Japan's Airports and Covid-19's Continued Impact on International Travel | Part 3 of 3

Like many Asian countries, Japan has been experiencing a twin-track air ...

Blog

Will Japan Achieve Its Inbound Tourism Targets? | Part 2 of 3

Japan finally lifting its stringent travel restrictions on 11th October 2022 ...

Blog

Japan’s Airlines – What Does the Future Hold? | Part 1 of 3

What does the future hold for Japan’s airlines? This is the first in a series ...

Keep informed. receive a weekly digest packed full of the latest insights

\n

A more in-depth analysis of the pandemic travel recovery focusing solely on international capacity reveals an even more optimistic outlook for the Middle East market, with a near 9% rate of growth representing 218 million seats.

\n

In comparison to the five larger regional markets, on international capacity the Middle East has reported the second strongest recovery with two regional markets, North-East and South-East Asia still below pre-pandemic levels at the end of 2024.

\n
\n

Middle East Airlines: Big AMbitions, Fierce Competition

\n

As of 2024, two Middle Eastern Carriers have gained prominence worldwide; Emirates and Qatar Airways are the only two Middle Eastern airlines to feature in 2024’s Top 20 Global Airlines for Capacity and the Top 10 Global Airlines by ASKs.

\n
\n

Emirates is now the 14th largest carrier globally by seat capacity and ranks 4th in terms of available seat kilometers (ASKs).  In ASK terms, it trails only the three major US mainline airlines.    

\n

Qatar Airways has experienced dramatic growth in the last decade, as it developed Doha as a global connecting point and moved from 36th largest airline globally 10 years ago to 19th in 2024.  In terms of ASKs, Qatar Airways has advanced from 17th to 6th largest globally in 2024.  

\n

The airline’s growth strategy is evident when looking at the Top 10 carriers in the Middle East.  In 2024, Qatar Airways’ capacity increased by 18% compared to 2019, while both Emirates and Saudia remained behind 2019 levels by 7% and 10%, respectively. 

\n
\n

Amongst the 10 largest carriers in the region, flynas - the Saudi based, privately owned carrier - is the fastest growing, increasing capacity by 63% in 2024 (compared to 2019 levels). This growth rate exceeded flydubai who also recorded strong growth of 56% in 2024.  Both flynas and flydubai operated similar volumes of capacity in 2024, at around 14.4m departing seats – although flynas is just ahead by 25,000 seats. 

\n


flydubai and flynas’ networks are similar, however flynas benefits from a large domestic market within Saudi Arabia, allowing them to operate a more diverse route network

\n

\"flynasflynas 2024 network

\n

\"flydubai

\n

flydubai 2024 network

\n

Looking to the legacy carriers, it’s clear that both Emirates and Qatar Airways are playing in similar spaces with very similar route networks. 

\n

\"Emirates

\n

Emirates 2024 network

\n

\"Qatar

\n

Qatar Airways 2024 network

\n

It’s clear from looking at Emirates and flydubai that there are clear synergies between their short-haul and long-haul networks and this is only likely to continue as competition rises in the region.   The combined position in capacity terms of both Emirates and flydubai cements the Emirates Group as the largest, with over 50 million departing seats in 2024, and 23% of the market for Middle East domiciled carriers.

\n
\n\n

Connecting Global Hubs: The Strategic Role of Middle East Aviation Hubs

\n

Alongside the ever-growing local market demand, the key feature of the Middle East and particularly the bigger markets of the UAE, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia, is the depth of network that they offer to travelers. 

\n

Non-stop flights from the region’s major hub airports reach every continent, with only a handful of international markets remaining unserved directly. 

\n

Doha to Auckland is currently the longest non-stop route operated from the Middle East by Qatar Airways, which at 7,843 Nautical Miles is slightly longer than Emirates’ Dubai to Auckland route at 7,664 Nautical Miles. 

\n

Currently, key South American markets such as Lima and Santiago fall just outside the operational reach from the Middle East.  In time, with ever increasing aircraft ranges, it is likely these destinations will provide new markets for the network carriers to increase their revenues further. 

\n

For many airlines around the world, connecting traffic has been the cornerstone of network growth, using 6th freedom traffic flows to support local demand and allow the introduction of new routes. The proposition being that as economic activity develops, populations grow, and trade advances, the local proportions of traffic will increase, potentially reducing reliance on the lower yielding transfer traffic that supported the route’s launch in the first place. 

\n

The analysis below shows the percentage of connecting traffic carried by the region’s major airlines at key intervals since 2015 and highlights each carrier’s dependency on connecting passengers.

\n
\n

 

\n

The inclusion of flydubai alongside Emirates reflects the degree to which the two airlines are increasingly coordinating schedules, transfer traffic and operational facilities to cross feed revenue within the broader Emirates Group, despite their differences in operating models. 

\n

For what has traditionally been regarded as the “Big Three” -  Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad – most of their passengers are connecting through their respective hub facilities with a range of between 84% for Qatar Airways to 66% for Emirates. While slight adjustments in their proportional connecting shares have occurred over the years, the ongoing network growth and increased connectivity almost inevitably leads to continued high connecting shares. Interestingly, the hybrid model of flydubai does show their increasing proportion of connecting traffic from 2015 to 2024 as the airline has in recent years been taking greater steps to align its network to that of Emirates. 

\n

Looking ahead and recognizing the ongoing developments in Saudi Arabia, Saudia - the current national airline and base carrier - has less than half of its traffic connecting through the Riyadh hub on international-to-international routings. Historic connectivity numbers at Riyadh reflect previous visa requirements which have been eased in recent years. However, reaching the levels of connecting traffic seen at other major Middle Eastern hubs will be a significant challenge in the years ahead.

\n

Charting Growth: Middle East LCCs Double Market Share in a Decade

\n

In 2024, LCCs accounted for 29% of capacity in the Middle East, having more than doubled in the last decade from just 13% of capacity in 2014. By comparison, globally, LCCs operated 34% of capacity in 2024.   

\n
\n

Tapping into a growing desire to fly within the region, LCC capacity has grown at a much faster rate than mainline capacity, increasing by an average of 11.5% year on year in the last decade, compared to a mainline growth rate of just 1.4% each year over the same time period.  

\n

The Middle East LCC market in 2024 has eight main players set out in the chart below. flydubai and flynas are largest, both with almost a quarter of LCC capacity each in the region. 

\n
\n
\n
\n

As expected, the majority of each of the main LCC’s capacity is focused on operating within the Middle East region, but as each carrier has evolved, so too have their networks and Africa represents an important market:
•    This is driven, to some extent, by the Saudi Arabia – Egypt market which accounts for a significant share – for Flyadeal, 96% of their African capacity operates to Egypt, and for flynas, 81%
•    This is an important market for Air Arabia too, with 73% of their Middle East – Africa capacity operating into Egypt 
Both flydubai and Air Arabia have a larger share of capacity operating into Asia, predominantly operating to the Indian subcontinent which serves the sizeable blue collar worker market that exists between the Indian subcontinent and the Middle East.   Their respective shares of their total Asia capacity into Southern Asia are: 
•    flydubai – 70% 
•    Air Arabia – 81%

\n

Geography also plays a part here, with LCCs preferring to maximize aircraft utilization each day, meaning short sectors of up to 4 hours are optimum in terms of network scheduling.  The proximity of India, North Africa, and Central Asia to the Middle East means there are many destinations within these countries and neighboring regions that fit this criteria. 

\n

Now that we’ve examined the expansion of networks and capacity in the Middle East, in the second part of this market analysis we’ll turn our focus to profitability and competition. Has this rapid growth resulted in a more competitive market? Do airlines remain profitable? And how does all this affect airfares for the consumer?

\n

Sign up for email updates below and you’ll be first to know when the second part of our Middle East aviation analysis goes live.

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Blog subscribe

","rss_summary":"

The Middle East has experienced an unparalleled era of growth, with airlines and airports consistently introducing innovative products and services to cater to the demands of a swiftly expanding market.

","keywords":[],"enable_google_amp_output_override":false,"generate_json_ld_enabled":true,"composition_id":0,"is_crawlable_by_bots":false,"tag_ids":[66382214546,172583813798],"topic_ids":[66382214546,172583813798],"post_summary":"

The Middle East has experienced an unparalleled era of growth, with airlines and airports consistently introducing innovative products and services to cater to the demands of a swiftly expanding market.

","post_body":"

The Middle East has experienced an unparalleled era of growth, with airlines and airports consistently introducing innovative products and services to cater to the demands of a swiftly expanding market.

\n

In recent years, the Middle East has established a leading position in developing new markets and connecting the region to the rest of the world with non-stop services to all continents and key cities. The region has a highly competitive environment with best-in-class airlines operating in all segments, alongside ambitious plans for new aircraft and routes. This makes the Middle East a real hot-spot in the aviation industry. 

\n

Deirdre F

\n

Setting the Scene of Today's Aviation Landscape

\n

The Middle East is the sixth largest region in the world based on available capacity, with 270 million one-way seats in 2024 placing the region ahead of Eastern Europe and behind South Asia

\n\n
\n

A more in-depth analysis of the pandemic travel recovery focusing solely on international capacity reveals an even more optimistic outlook for the Middle East market, with a near 9% rate of growth representing 218 million seats.

\n

In comparison to the five larger regional markets, on international capacity the Middle East has reported the second strongest recovery with two regional markets, North-East and South-East Asia still below pre-pandemic levels at the end of 2024.

\n
\n

Middle East Airlines: Big AMbitions, Fierce Competition

\n

As of 2024, two Middle Eastern Carriers have gained prominence worldwide; Emirates and Qatar Airways are the only two Middle Eastern airlines to feature in 2024’s Top 20 Global Airlines for Capacity and the Top 10 Global Airlines by ASKs.

\n
\n

Emirates is now the 14th largest carrier globally by seat capacity and ranks 4th in terms of available seat kilometers (ASKs).  In ASK terms, it trails only the three major US mainline airlines.    

\n

Qatar Airways has experienced dramatic growth in the last decade, as it developed Doha as a global connecting point and moved from 36th largest airline globally 10 years ago to 19th in 2024.  In terms of ASKs, Qatar Airways has advanced from 17th to 6th largest globally in 2024.  

\n

The airline’s growth strategy is evident when looking at the Top 10 carriers in the Middle East.  In 2024, Qatar Airways’ capacity increased by 18% compared to 2019, while both Emirates and Saudia remained behind 2019 levels by 7% and 10%, respectively. 

\n
\n

Amongst the 10 largest carriers in the region, flynas - the Saudi based, privately owned carrier - is the fastest growing, increasing capacity by 63% in 2024 (compared to 2019 levels). This growth rate exceeded flydubai who also recorded strong growth of 56% in 2024.  Both flynas and flydubai operated similar volumes of capacity in 2024, at around 14.4m departing seats – although flynas is just ahead by 25,000 seats. 

\n


flydubai and flynas’ networks are similar, however flynas benefits from a large domestic market within Saudi Arabia, allowing them to operate a more diverse route network

\n

\"flynasflynas 2024 network

\n

\"flydubai

\n

flydubai 2024 network

\n

Looking to the legacy carriers, it’s clear that both Emirates and Qatar Airways are playing in similar spaces with very similar route networks. 

\n

\"Emirates

\n

Emirates 2024 network

\n

\"Qatar

\n

Qatar Airways 2024 network

\n

It’s clear from looking at Emirates and flydubai that there are clear synergies between their short-haul and long-haul networks and this is only likely to continue as competition rises in the region.   The combined position in capacity terms of both Emirates and flydubai cements the Emirates Group as the largest, with over 50 million departing seats in 2024, and 23% of the market for Middle East domiciled carriers.

\n
\n\n

Connecting Global Hubs: The Strategic Role of Middle East Aviation Hubs

\n

Alongside the ever-growing local market demand, the key feature of the Middle East and particularly the bigger markets of the UAE, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia, is the depth of network that they offer to travelers. 

\n

Non-stop flights from the region’s major hub airports reach every continent, with only a handful of international markets remaining unserved directly. 

\n

Doha to Auckland is currently the longest non-stop route operated from the Middle East by Qatar Airways, which at 7,843 Nautical Miles is slightly longer than Emirates’ Dubai to Auckland route at 7,664 Nautical Miles. 

\n

Currently, key South American markets such as Lima and Santiago fall just outside the operational reach from the Middle East.  In time, with ever increasing aircraft ranges, it is likely these destinations will provide new markets for the network carriers to increase their revenues further. 

\n

For many airlines around the world, connecting traffic has been the cornerstone of network growth, using 6th freedom traffic flows to support local demand and allow the introduction of new routes. The proposition being that as economic activity develops, populations grow, and trade advances, the local proportions of traffic will increase, potentially reducing reliance on the lower yielding transfer traffic that supported the route’s launch in the first place. 

\n

The analysis below shows the percentage of connecting traffic carried by the region’s major airlines at key intervals since 2015 and highlights each carrier’s dependency on connecting passengers.

\n
\n

 

\n

The inclusion of flydubai alongside Emirates reflects the degree to which the two airlines are increasingly coordinating schedules, transfer traffic and operational facilities to cross feed revenue within the broader Emirates Group, despite their differences in operating models. 

\n

For what has traditionally been regarded as the “Big Three” -  Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad – most of their passengers are connecting through their respective hub facilities with a range of between 84% for Qatar Airways to 66% for Emirates. While slight adjustments in their proportional connecting shares have occurred over the years, the ongoing network growth and increased connectivity almost inevitably leads to continued high connecting shares. Interestingly, the hybrid model of flydubai does show their increasing proportion of connecting traffic from 2015 to 2024 as the airline has in recent years been taking greater steps to align its network to that of Emirates. 

\n

Looking ahead and recognizing the ongoing developments in Saudi Arabia, Saudia - the current national airline and base carrier - has less than half of its traffic connecting through the Riyadh hub on international-to-international routings. Historic connectivity numbers at Riyadh reflect previous visa requirements which have been eased in recent years. However, reaching the levels of connecting traffic seen at other major Middle Eastern hubs will be a significant challenge in the years ahead.

\n

Charting Growth: Middle East LCCs Double Market Share in a Decade

\n

In 2024, LCCs accounted for 29% of capacity in the Middle East, having more than doubled in the last decade from just 13% of capacity in 2014. By comparison, globally, LCCs operated 34% of capacity in 2024.   

\n
\n

Tapping into a growing desire to fly within the region, LCC capacity has grown at a much faster rate than mainline capacity, increasing by an average of 11.5% year on year in the last decade, compared to a mainline growth rate of just 1.4% each year over the same time period.  

\n

The Middle East LCC market in 2024 has eight main players set out in the chart below. flydubai and flynas are largest, both with almost a quarter of LCC capacity each in the region. 

\n
\n
\n
\n

As expected, the majority of each of the main LCC’s capacity is focused on operating within the Middle East region, but as each carrier has evolved, so too have their networks and Africa represents an important market:
•    This is driven, to some extent, by the Saudi Arabia – Egypt market which accounts for a significant share – for Flyadeal, 96% of their African capacity operates to Egypt, and for flynas, 81%
•    This is an important market for Air Arabia too, with 73% of their Middle East – Africa capacity operating into Egypt 
Both flydubai and Air Arabia have a larger share of capacity operating into Asia, predominantly operating to the Indian subcontinent which serves the sizeable blue collar worker market that exists between the Indian subcontinent and the Middle East.   Their respective shares of their total Asia capacity into Southern Asia are: 
•    flydubai – 70% 
•    Air Arabia – 81%

\n

Geography also plays a part here, with LCCs preferring to maximize aircraft utilization each day, meaning short sectors of up to 4 hours are optimum in terms of network scheduling.  The proximity of India, North Africa, and Central Asia to the Middle East means there are many destinations within these countries and neighboring regions that fit this criteria. 

\n

Now that we’ve examined the expansion of networks and capacity in the Middle East, in the second part of this market analysis we’ll turn our focus to profitability and competition. Has this rapid growth resulted in a more competitive market? Do airlines remain profitable? And how does all this affect airfares for the consumer?

\n

Sign up for email updates below and you’ll be first to know when the second part of our Middle East aviation analysis goes live.

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Blog subscribe

","html_title":"Middle East Aviation: Growth in the World’s Second-Fastest Growing Market","public_access_rules":[],"public_access_rules_enabled":false,"use_featured_image":true,"head_html":null,"footer_html":null,"attached_stylesheets":[],"enable_domain_stylesheets":null,"include_default_custom_css":null,"layout_sections":{},"past_mab_experiment_ids":[],"deleted_by":null,"featured_image_alt_text":"Middle East Aviation 2025 Growth","enable_layout_stylesheets":null,"tweet":null,"tweet_at":null,"campaign_name":"2025 Q2: Blog Content","campaign_utm":"12413326-2025%20Q2%3A%20Blog%20Content","meta_keywords":null,"meta_description":"Discover the dynamic growth of the Middle East aviation market, analysing key airlines, capacity expansion, and the strategic role of regional hubs.","tweet_immediately":false,"publish_immediately":true,"security_state":"NONE","scheduled_update_date":0,"placement_guids":[],"property_for_dynamic_page_title":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_slug":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_meta_description":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_featured_image":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_canonical_url":null,"preview_image_src":null,"legacy_blog_tabid":null,"legacy_post_guid":null,"performable_variation_letter":null,"style_override_id":null,"has_user_changes":true,"css":{},"css_text":"","unpublished_at":0,"published_by_id":47234281,"allowed_slug_conflict":false,"ai_features":null,"link_rel_canonical_url":"","page_redirected":false,"page_expiry_enabled":null,"page_expiry_date":null,"page_expiry_redirect_id":null,"page_expiry_redirect_url":null,"deleted_by_id":null,"state_when_deleted":null,"cloned_from":null,"staged_from":null,"personas":[],"compose_body":null,"featured_image":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Middle%20East%20Aviation%202025%20pt1.jpg","featured_image_width":1600,"featured_image_height":900,"publish_timezone_offset":null,"theme_settings_values":null,"password":null,"header":null,"published_at":1747828400496,"last_edit_session_id":null,"last_edit_update_id":null,"created_by_agent":null},"metaDescription":"Discover the dynamic growth of the Middle East aviation market, analysing key airlines, capacity expansion, and the strategic role of regional hubs.","metaKeywords":null,"name":"Middle East Aviation: Growth in the World’s Second-Fastest Growing Market","nextPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/May%202025%20radar.jpg","nextPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","nextPostName":"Three Airline-Tech Innovations Raising the AI Bar in May 2025","nextPostSlug":"blog/may-2025s-airline-tech-innovations","pageExpiryDate":null,"pageExpiryEnabled":null,"pageExpiryRedirectId":null,"pageExpiryRedirectUrl":null,"pageRedirected":false,"pageTitle":"Middle East Aviation: Growth in the World’s Second-Fastest Growing Market","parentBlog":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog","allowComments":false,"ampBodyColor":"#404040","ampBodyFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampBodyFontSize":"18","ampCustomCss":"","ampHeaderBackgroundColor":"#ffffff","ampHeaderColor":"#1e1e1e","ampHeaderFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampHeaderFontSize":"36","ampLinkColor":"#416bb3","ampLogoAlt":"OAG Black 2018","ampLogoHeight":594,"ampLogoSrc":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/OAG%20Black%202018.png","ampLogoWidth":945,"analyticsPageId":2547580647,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","businessUnitId":null,"captchaAfterDays":7,"captchaAlways":false,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"closeCommentsOlder":0,"commentDateFormat":"medium","commentFormGuid":"5fddd154-8ed7-470d-bdc0-b3267efba414","commentMaxThreadDepth":4,"commentModeration":false,"commentNotificationEmails":["katy.ludwell@oag.com","hiten.patel@oag.com"],"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentVerificationText":"Thank you for your comment. It has been received.","cosObjectType":"BLOG","created":1424960760000,"createdDateTime":1424960760000,"dailyNotificationEmailId":"2547580932","dateFormattingLanguage":"en_GB","defaultGroupStyleId":"","defaultNotificationFromName":"","defaultNotificationReplyTo":"","deletedAt":0,"description":"Take a look at the OAG Aviation Blog for the latest airline travel news, thought leadership on topics affecting the industry and aviation infographics.","domain":"","domainWhenPublished":"www.oag.com","emailApiSubscriptionId":700840,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"enableSocialAutoPublishing":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":true,"header":null,"htmlFooter":"","htmlFooterIsShared":true,"htmlHead":"","htmlHeadIsShared":true,"htmlKeywords":[],"htmlTitle":"The OAG Blog","id":2547580647,"ilsSubscriptionListsByType":{"daily":2928,"instant":2925,"monthly":2923,"weekly":2930},"instantNotificationEmailId":"27411260688","itemLayoutId":null,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"itemTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","label":"Blog","language":"en-gb","legacyGuid":null,"legacyModuleId":null,"legacyTabId":null,"listingLayoutId":null,"listingPageId":98966560049,"listingTemplatePath":"generated_layouts/66381677173.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","monthFilterFormat":"MMMM yyyy","monthlyNotificationEmailId":null,"name":"Blog","parentBlogUpdateTaskId":null,"portalId":490937,"postHtmlFooter":"","postHtmlHead":"","postsPerListingPage":1000,"postsPerRssFeed":10,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publicTitle":"The OAG Blog","publishDateFormat":"dd MMMM yyyy","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","rootUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog","rssCustomFeed":null,"rssDescription":null,"rssItemFooter":null,"rssItemHeader":null,"settingsOverrides":{"itemLayoutId":true,"itemTemplatePath":true,"itemTemplateIsShared":true,"listingLayoutId":true,"listingTemplatePath":true,"postsPerListingPage":false,"showSummaryInListing":false,"useFeaturedImageInSummary":false,"htmlHead":false,"postHtmlHead":false,"htmlHeadIsShared":false,"htmlFooter":false,"listingPageHtmlFooter":false,"postHtmlFooter":false,"htmlFooterIsShared":false,"attachedStylesheets":false,"postsPerRssFeed":false,"showSummaryInRss":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummariesInEmails":false,"allowComments":false,"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentModeration":false,"closeCommentsOlder":false,"commentNotificationEmails":false,"commentMaxThreadDepth":false,"commentVerificationText":false,"socialAccountTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"ampLogoSrc":false,"ampLogoHeight":false,"ampLogoWidth":false,"ampLogoAlt":false,"ampHeaderFont":false,"ampHeaderFontSize":false,"ampHeaderColor":false,"ampHeaderBackgroundColor":false,"ampBodyFont":false,"ampBodyFontSize":false,"ampBodyColor":false,"ampLinkColor":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false},"showSocialLinkFacebook":true,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":true,"showSocialLinkTwitter":true,"showSummaryInEmails":true,"showSummaryInListing":true,"showSummaryInRss":true,"siteId":0,"slug":"blog","socialAccountTwitter":"@OAG_Aviation","state":null,"subscriptionContactsProperty":"blog_oag_blog_subscription","subscriptionEmailType":null,"subscriptionFormGuid":"fe2ff6b0-4487-4dcf-8851-cab226ede82d","subscriptionListsByType":{"daily":7,"instant":6,"monthly":5,"weekly":8},"title":null,"translatedFromId":136596164207,"translations":{"en":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/en/blog","id":136596164207,"language":"en","masterId":null,"name":"Blog","publicAccessRules":[{"ids":[],"ilsIds":[],"type":"PUBLIC"}],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"slug":"en/blog"}},"updated":1696334483549,"updatedDateTime":1696334483549,"urlBase":"www.oag.com/blog","urlSegments":{},"useFeaturedImageInSummary":true,"usesDefaultTemplate":false,"weeklyNotificationEmailId":"2547580962"},"password":null,"pastMabExperimentIds":[],"performableGuid":null,"performableVariationLetter":null,"personalizationStrategyId":null,"personalizationVariantStatus":null,"personas":[],"placementGuids":[],"portableKey":null,"portalId":490937,"position":null,"postBody":"

The Middle East has experienced an unparalleled era of growth, with airlines and airports consistently introducing innovative products and services to cater to the demands of a swiftly expanding market.

\n

In recent years, the Middle East has established a leading position in developing new markets and connecting the region to the rest of the world with non-stop services to all continents and key cities. The region has a highly competitive environment with best-in-class airlines operating in all segments, alongside ambitious plans for new aircraft and routes. This makes the Middle East a real hot-spot in the aviation industry. 

\n

Deirdre F

\n

Setting the Scene of Today's Aviation Landscape

\n

The Middle East is the sixth largest region in the world based on available capacity, with 270 million one-way seats in 2024 placing the region ahead of Eastern Europe and behind South Asia

\n\n
\n

A more in-depth analysis of the pandemic travel recovery focusing solely on international capacity reveals an even more optimistic outlook for the Middle East market, with a near 9% rate of growth representing 218 million seats.

\n

In comparison to the five larger regional markets, on international capacity the Middle East has reported the second strongest recovery with two regional markets, North-East and South-East Asia still below pre-pandemic levels at the end of 2024.

\n
\n

Middle East Airlines: Big AMbitions, Fierce Competition

\n

As of 2024, two Middle Eastern Carriers have gained prominence worldwide; Emirates and Qatar Airways are the only two Middle Eastern airlines to feature in 2024’s Top 20 Global Airlines for Capacity and the Top 10 Global Airlines by ASKs.

\n
\n

Emirates is now the 14th largest carrier globally by seat capacity and ranks 4th in terms of available seat kilometers (ASKs).  In ASK terms, it trails only the three major US mainline airlines.    

\n

Qatar Airways has experienced dramatic growth in the last decade, as it developed Doha as a global connecting point and moved from 36th largest airline globally 10 years ago to 19th in 2024.  In terms of ASKs, Qatar Airways has advanced from 17th to 6th largest globally in 2024.  

\n

The airline’s growth strategy is evident when looking at the Top 10 carriers in the Middle East.  In 2024, Qatar Airways’ capacity increased by 18% compared to 2019, while both Emirates and Saudia remained behind 2019 levels by 7% and 10%, respectively. 

\n
\n

Amongst the 10 largest carriers in the region, flynas - the Saudi based, privately owned carrier - is the fastest growing, increasing capacity by 63% in 2024 (compared to 2019 levels). This growth rate exceeded flydubai who also recorded strong growth of 56% in 2024.  Both flynas and flydubai operated similar volumes of capacity in 2024, at around 14.4m departing seats – although flynas is just ahead by 25,000 seats. 

\n


flydubai and flynas’ networks are similar, however flynas benefits from a large domestic market within Saudi Arabia, allowing them to operate a more diverse route network

\n

\"flynasflynas 2024 network

\n

\"flydubai

\n

flydubai 2024 network

\n

Looking to the legacy carriers, it’s clear that both Emirates and Qatar Airways are playing in similar spaces with very similar route networks. 

\n

\"Emirates

\n

Emirates 2024 network

\n

\"Qatar

\n

Qatar Airways 2024 network

\n

It’s clear from looking at Emirates and flydubai that there are clear synergies between their short-haul and long-haul networks and this is only likely to continue as competition rises in the region.   The combined position in capacity terms of both Emirates and flydubai cements the Emirates Group as the largest, with over 50 million departing seats in 2024, and 23% of the market for Middle East domiciled carriers.

\n
\n\n

Connecting Global Hubs: The Strategic Role of Middle East Aviation Hubs

\n

Alongside the ever-growing local market demand, the key feature of the Middle East and particularly the bigger markets of the UAE, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia, is the depth of network that they offer to travelers. 

\n

Non-stop flights from the region’s major hub airports reach every continent, with only a handful of international markets remaining unserved directly. 

\n

Doha to Auckland is currently the longest non-stop route operated from the Middle East by Qatar Airways, which at 7,843 Nautical Miles is slightly longer than Emirates’ Dubai to Auckland route at 7,664 Nautical Miles. 

\n

Currently, key South American markets such as Lima and Santiago fall just outside the operational reach from the Middle East.  In time, with ever increasing aircraft ranges, it is likely these destinations will provide new markets for the network carriers to increase their revenues further. 

\n

For many airlines around the world, connecting traffic has been the cornerstone of network growth, using 6th freedom traffic flows to support local demand and allow the introduction of new routes. The proposition being that as economic activity develops, populations grow, and trade advances, the local proportions of traffic will increase, potentially reducing reliance on the lower yielding transfer traffic that supported the route’s launch in the first place. 

\n

The analysis below shows the percentage of connecting traffic carried by the region’s major airlines at key intervals since 2015 and highlights each carrier’s dependency on connecting passengers.

\n
\n

 

\n

The inclusion of flydubai alongside Emirates reflects the degree to which the two airlines are increasingly coordinating schedules, transfer traffic and operational facilities to cross feed revenue within the broader Emirates Group, despite their differences in operating models. 

\n

For what has traditionally been regarded as the “Big Three” -  Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad – most of their passengers are connecting through their respective hub facilities with a range of between 84% for Qatar Airways to 66% for Emirates. While slight adjustments in their proportional connecting shares have occurred over the years, the ongoing network growth and increased connectivity almost inevitably leads to continued high connecting shares. Interestingly, the hybrid model of flydubai does show their increasing proportion of connecting traffic from 2015 to 2024 as the airline has in recent years been taking greater steps to align its network to that of Emirates. 

\n

Looking ahead and recognizing the ongoing developments in Saudi Arabia, Saudia - the current national airline and base carrier - has less than half of its traffic connecting through the Riyadh hub on international-to-international routings. Historic connectivity numbers at Riyadh reflect previous visa requirements which have been eased in recent years. However, reaching the levels of connecting traffic seen at other major Middle Eastern hubs will be a significant challenge in the years ahead.

\n

Charting Growth: Middle East LCCs Double Market Share in a Decade

\n

In 2024, LCCs accounted for 29% of capacity in the Middle East, having more than doubled in the last decade from just 13% of capacity in 2014. By comparison, globally, LCCs operated 34% of capacity in 2024.   

\n
\n

Tapping into a growing desire to fly within the region, LCC capacity has grown at a much faster rate than mainline capacity, increasing by an average of 11.5% year on year in the last decade, compared to a mainline growth rate of just 1.4% each year over the same time period.  

\n

The Middle East LCC market in 2024 has eight main players set out in the chart below. flydubai and flynas are largest, both with almost a quarter of LCC capacity each in the region. 

\n
\n
\n
\n

As expected, the majority of each of the main LCC’s capacity is focused on operating within the Middle East region, but as each carrier has evolved, so too have their networks and Africa represents an important market:
•    This is driven, to some extent, by the Saudi Arabia – Egypt market which accounts for a significant share – for Flyadeal, 96% of their African capacity operates to Egypt, and for flynas, 81%
•    This is an important market for Air Arabia too, with 73% of their Middle East – Africa capacity operating into Egypt 
Both flydubai and Air Arabia have a larger share of capacity operating into Asia, predominantly operating to the Indian subcontinent which serves the sizeable blue collar worker market that exists between the Indian subcontinent and the Middle East.   Their respective shares of their total Asia capacity into Southern Asia are: 
•    flydubai – 70% 
•    Air Arabia – 81%

\n

Geography also plays a part here, with LCCs preferring to maximize aircraft utilization each day, meaning short sectors of up to 4 hours are optimum in terms of network scheduling.  The proximity of India, North Africa, and Central Asia to the Middle East means there are many destinations within these countries and neighboring regions that fit this criteria. 

\n

Now that we’ve examined the expansion of networks and capacity in the Middle East, in the second part of this market analysis we’ll turn our focus to profitability and competition. Has this rapid growth resulted in a more competitive market? Do airlines remain profitable? And how does all this affect airfares for the consumer?

\n

Sign up for email updates below and you’ll be first to know when the second part of our Middle East aviation analysis goes live.

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Blog subscribe

","postBodyRss":"

The Middle East has experienced an unparalleled era of growth, with airlines and airports consistently introducing innovative products and services to cater to the demands of a swiftly expanding market.

\n

In recent years, the Middle East has established a leading position in developing new markets and connecting the region to the rest of the world with non-stop services to all continents and key cities. The region has a highly competitive environment with best-in-class airlines operating in all segments, alongside ambitious plans for new aircraft and routes. This makes the Middle East a real hot-spot in the aviation industry. 

\n

Deirdre F

\n

Setting the Scene of Today's Aviation Landscape

\n

The Middle East is the sixth largest region in the world based on available capacity, with 270 million one-way seats in 2024 placing the region ahead of Eastern Europe and behind South Asia

\n\n
\n

A more in-depth analysis of the pandemic travel recovery focusing solely on international capacity reveals an even more optimistic outlook for the Middle East market, with a near 9% rate of growth representing 218 million seats.

\n

In comparison to the five larger regional markets, on international capacity the Middle East has reported the second strongest recovery with two regional markets, North-East and South-East Asia still below pre-pandemic levels at the end of 2024.

\n
\n

Middle East Airlines: Big AMbitions, Fierce Competition

\n

As of 2024, two Middle Eastern Carriers have gained prominence worldwide; Emirates and Qatar Airways are the only two Middle Eastern airlines to feature in 2024’s Top 20 Global Airlines for Capacity and the Top 10 Global Airlines by ASKs.

\n
\n

Emirates is now the 14th largest carrier globally by seat capacity and ranks 4th in terms of available seat kilometers (ASKs).  In ASK terms, it trails only the three major US mainline airlines.    

\n

Qatar Airways has experienced dramatic growth in the last decade, as it developed Doha as a global connecting point and moved from 36th largest airline globally 10 years ago to 19th in 2024.  In terms of ASKs, Qatar Airways has advanced from 17th to 6th largest globally in 2024.  

\n

The airline’s growth strategy is evident when looking at the Top 10 carriers in the Middle East.  In 2024, Qatar Airways’ capacity increased by 18% compared to 2019, while both Emirates and Saudia remained behind 2019 levels by 7% and 10%, respectively. 

\n
\n

Amongst the 10 largest carriers in the region, flynas - the Saudi based, privately owned carrier - is the fastest growing, increasing capacity by 63% in 2024 (compared to 2019 levels). This growth rate exceeded flydubai who also recorded strong growth of 56% in 2024.  Both flynas and flydubai operated similar volumes of capacity in 2024, at around 14.4m departing seats – although flynas is just ahead by 25,000 seats. 

\n


flydubai and flynas’ networks are similar, however flynas benefits from a large domestic market within Saudi Arabia, allowing them to operate a more diverse route network

\n

\"flynasflynas 2024 network

\n

\"flydubai

\n

flydubai 2024 network

\n

Looking to the legacy carriers, it’s clear that both Emirates and Qatar Airways are playing in similar spaces with very similar route networks. 

\n

\"Emirates

\n

Emirates 2024 network

\n

\"Qatar

\n

Qatar Airways 2024 network

\n

It’s clear from looking at Emirates and flydubai that there are clear synergies between their short-haul and long-haul networks and this is only likely to continue as competition rises in the region.   The combined position in capacity terms of both Emirates and flydubai cements the Emirates Group as the largest, with over 50 million departing seats in 2024, and 23% of the market for Middle East domiciled carriers.

\n
\n\n

Connecting Global Hubs: The Strategic Role of Middle East Aviation Hubs

\n

Alongside the ever-growing local market demand, the key feature of the Middle East and particularly the bigger markets of the UAE, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia, is the depth of network that they offer to travelers. 

\n

Non-stop flights from the region’s major hub airports reach every continent, with only a handful of international markets remaining unserved directly. 

\n

Doha to Auckland is currently the longest non-stop route operated from the Middle East by Qatar Airways, which at 7,843 Nautical Miles is slightly longer than Emirates’ Dubai to Auckland route at 7,664 Nautical Miles. 

\n

Currently, key South American markets such as Lima and Santiago fall just outside the operational reach from the Middle East.  In time, with ever increasing aircraft ranges, it is likely these destinations will provide new markets for the network carriers to increase their revenues further. 

\n

For many airlines around the world, connecting traffic has been the cornerstone of network growth, using 6th freedom traffic flows to support local demand and allow the introduction of new routes. The proposition being that as economic activity develops, populations grow, and trade advances, the local proportions of traffic will increase, potentially reducing reliance on the lower yielding transfer traffic that supported the route’s launch in the first place. 

\n

The analysis below shows the percentage of connecting traffic carried by the region’s major airlines at key intervals since 2015 and highlights each carrier’s dependency on connecting passengers.

\n
\n

 

\n

The inclusion of flydubai alongside Emirates reflects the degree to which the two airlines are increasingly coordinating schedules, transfer traffic and operational facilities to cross feed revenue within the broader Emirates Group, despite their differences in operating models. 

\n

For what has traditionally been regarded as the “Big Three” -  Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad – most of their passengers are connecting through their respective hub facilities with a range of between 84% for Qatar Airways to 66% for Emirates. While slight adjustments in their proportional connecting shares have occurred over the years, the ongoing network growth and increased connectivity almost inevitably leads to continued high connecting shares. Interestingly, the hybrid model of flydubai does show their increasing proportion of connecting traffic from 2015 to 2024 as the airline has in recent years been taking greater steps to align its network to that of Emirates. 

\n

Looking ahead and recognizing the ongoing developments in Saudi Arabia, Saudia - the current national airline and base carrier - has less than half of its traffic connecting through the Riyadh hub on international-to-international routings. Historic connectivity numbers at Riyadh reflect previous visa requirements which have been eased in recent years. However, reaching the levels of connecting traffic seen at other major Middle Eastern hubs will be a significant challenge in the years ahead.

\n

Charting Growth: Middle East LCCs Double Market Share in a Decade

\n

In 2024, LCCs accounted for 29% of capacity in the Middle East, having more than doubled in the last decade from just 13% of capacity in 2014. By comparison, globally, LCCs operated 34% of capacity in 2024.   

\n
\n

Tapping into a growing desire to fly within the region, LCC capacity has grown at a much faster rate than mainline capacity, increasing by an average of 11.5% year on year in the last decade, compared to a mainline growth rate of just 1.4% each year over the same time period.  

\n

The Middle East LCC market in 2024 has eight main players set out in the chart below. flydubai and flynas are largest, both with almost a quarter of LCC capacity each in the region. 

\n
\n
\n
\n

As expected, the majority of each of the main LCC’s capacity is focused on operating within the Middle East region, but as each carrier has evolved, so too have their networks and Africa represents an important market:
•    This is driven, to some extent, by the Saudi Arabia – Egypt market which accounts for a significant share – for Flyadeal, 96% of their African capacity operates to Egypt, and for flynas, 81%
•    This is an important market for Air Arabia too, with 73% of their Middle East – Africa capacity operating into Egypt 
Both flydubai and Air Arabia have a larger share of capacity operating into Asia, predominantly operating to the Indian subcontinent which serves the sizeable blue collar worker market that exists between the Indian subcontinent and the Middle East.   Their respective shares of their total Asia capacity into Southern Asia are: 
•    flydubai – 70% 
•    Air Arabia – 81%

\n

Geography also plays a part here, with LCCs preferring to maximize aircraft utilization each day, meaning short sectors of up to 4 hours are optimum in terms of network scheduling.  The proximity of India, North Africa, and Central Asia to the Middle East means there are many destinations within these countries and neighboring regions that fit this criteria. 

\n

Now that we’ve examined the expansion of networks and capacity in the Middle East, in the second part of this market analysis we’ll turn our focus to profitability and competition. Has this rapid growth resulted in a more competitive market? Do airlines remain profitable? And how does all this affect airfares for the consumer?

\n

Sign up for email updates below and you’ll be first to know when the second part of our Middle East aviation analysis goes live.

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Blog subscribe

","postEmailContent":"

The Middle East has experienced an unparalleled era of growth, with airlines and airports consistently introducing innovative products and services to cater to the demands of a swiftly expanding market.

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Middle%20East%20Aviation%202025%20pt1.jpg","postListContent":"

The Middle East has experienced an unparalleled era of growth, with airlines and airports consistently introducing innovative products and services to cater to the demands of a swiftly expanding market.

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Middle%20East%20Aviation%202025%20pt1.jpg","postRssContent":"

The Middle East has experienced an unparalleled era of growth, with airlines and airports consistently introducing innovative products and services to cater to the demands of a swiftly expanding market.

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Middle%20East%20Aviation%202025%20pt1.jpg","postSummary":"

The Middle East has experienced an unparalleled era of growth, with airlines and airports consistently introducing innovative products and services to cater to the demands of a swiftly expanding market.

","postSummaryRss":"

The Middle East has experienced an unparalleled era of growth, with airlines and airports consistently introducing innovative products and services to cater to the demands of a swiftly expanding market.

","postTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"joUlYfhK","previousPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Transatlantic%20ASKs%20or.jpg","previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":"Transatlantic Aviation Market Measuring by ASKs or Seats","previousPostName":"Transatlantic Air Travel Demand This Summer: Measure by ASKs or Seats?","previousPostSlug":"blog/transatlantic-air-travel-demand-this-summer-measure-by-asks-or-seats","processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1747825546000,"publishDateLocalTime":1747825546000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1747825546000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":"en_GB"},"publishImmediately":true,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1747828400496,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":47234281,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog/middle-east-aviation-growth-in-the-worlds-second-fastest-growing-market","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

The Middle East has experienced an unparalleled era of growth, with airlines and airports consistently introducing innovative products and services to cater to the demands of a swiftly expanding market.

\n

In recent years, the Middle East has established a leading position in developing new markets and connecting the region to the rest of the world with non-stop services to all continents and key cities. The region has a highly competitive environment with best-in-class airlines operating in all segments, alongside ambitious plans for new aircraft and routes. This makes the Middle East a real hot-spot in the aviation industry. 

\n

Deirdre F

\n

Setting the Scene of Today's Aviation Landscape

\n

The Middle East is the sixth largest region in the world based on available capacity, with 270 million one-way seats in 2024 placing the region ahead of Eastern Europe and behind South Asia

\n\n
\n

A more in-depth analysis of the pandemic travel recovery focusing solely on international capacity reveals an even more optimistic outlook for the Middle East market, with a near 9% rate of growth representing 218 million seats.

\n

In comparison to the five larger regional markets, on international capacity the Middle East has reported the second strongest recovery with two regional markets, North-East and South-East Asia still below pre-pandemic levels at the end of 2024.

\n
\n

Middle East Airlines: Big AMbitions, Fierce Competition

\n

As of 2024, two Middle Eastern Carriers have gained prominence worldwide; Emirates and Qatar Airways are the only two Middle Eastern airlines to feature in 2024’s Top 20 Global Airlines for Capacity and the Top 10 Global Airlines by ASKs.

\n
\n

Emirates is now the 14th largest carrier globally by seat capacity and ranks 4th in terms of available seat kilometers (ASKs).  In ASK terms, it trails only the three major US mainline airlines.    

\n

Qatar Airways has experienced dramatic growth in the last decade, as it developed Doha as a global connecting point and moved from 36th largest airline globally 10 years ago to 19th in 2024.  In terms of ASKs, Qatar Airways has advanced from 17th to 6th largest globally in 2024.  

\n

The airline’s growth strategy is evident when looking at the Top 10 carriers in the Middle East.  In 2024, Qatar Airways’ capacity increased by 18% compared to 2019, while both Emirates and Saudia remained behind 2019 levels by 7% and 10%, respectively. 

\n
\n

Amongst the 10 largest carriers in the region, flynas - the Saudi based, privately owned carrier - is the fastest growing, increasing capacity by 63% in 2024 (compared to 2019 levels). This growth rate exceeded flydubai who also recorded strong growth of 56% in 2024.  Both flynas and flydubai operated similar volumes of capacity in 2024, at around 14.4m departing seats – although flynas is just ahead by 25,000 seats. 

\n


flydubai and flynas’ networks are similar, however flynas benefits from a large domestic market within Saudi Arabia, allowing them to operate a more diverse route network

\n

\"flynasflynas 2024 network

\n

\"flydubai

\n

flydubai 2024 network

\n

Looking to the legacy carriers, it’s clear that both Emirates and Qatar Airways are playing in similar spaces with very similar route networks. 

\n

\"Emirates

\n

Emirates 2024 network

\n

\"Qatar

\n

Qatar Airways 2024 network

\n

It’s clear from looking at Emirates and flydubai that there are clear synergies between their short-haul and long-haul networks and this is only likely to continue as competition rises in the region.   The combined position in capacity terms of both Emirates and flydubai cements the Emirates Group as the largest, with over 50 million departing seats in 2024, and 23% of the market for Middle East domiciled carriers.

\n
\n\n

Connecting Global Hubs: The Strategic Role of Middle East Aviation Hubs

\n

Alongside the ever-growing local market demand, the key feature of the Middle East and particularly the bigger markets of the UAE, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia, is the depth of network that they offer to travelers. 

\n

Non-stop flights from the region’s major hub airports reach every continent, with only a handful of international markets remaining unserved directly. 

\n

Doha to Auckland is currently the longest non-stop route operated from the Middle East by Qatar Airways, which at 7,843 Nautical Miles is slightly longer than Emirates’ Dubai to Auckland route at 7,664 Nautical Miles. 

\n

Currently, key South American markets such as Lima and Santiago fall just outside the operational reach from the Middle East.  In time, with ever increasing aircraft ranges, it is likely these destinations will provide new markets for the network carriers to increase their revenues further. 

\n

For many airlines around the world, connecting traffic has been the cornerstone of network growth, using 6th freedom traffic flows to support local demand and allow the introduction of new routes. The proposition being that as economic activity develops, populations grow, and trade advances, the local proportions of traffic will increase, potentially reducing reliance on the lower yielding transfer traffic that supported the route’s launch in the first place. 

\n

The analysis below shows the percentage of connecting traffic carried by the region’s major airlines at key intervals since 2015 and highlights each carrier’s dependency on connecting passengers.

\n
\n

 

\n

The inclusion of flydubai alongside Emirates reflects the degree to which the two airlines are increasingly coordinating schedules, transfer traffic and operational facilities to cross feed revenue within the broader Emirates Group, despite their differences in operating models. 

\n

For what has traditionally been regarded as the “Big Three” -  Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad – most of their passengers are connecting through their respective hub facilities with a range of between 84% for Qatar Airways to 66% for Emirates. While slight adjustments in their proportional connecting shares have occurred over the years, the ongoing network growth and increased connectivity almost inevitably leads to continued high connecting shares. Interestingly, the hybrid model of flydubai does show their increasing proportion of connecting traffic from 2015 to 2024 as the airline has in recent years been taking greater steps to align its network to that of Emirates. 

\n

Looking ahead and recognizing the ongoing developments in Saudi Arabia, Saudia - the current national airline and base carrier - has less than half of its traffic connecting through the Riyadh hub on international-to-international routings. Historic connectivity numbers at Riyadh reflect previous visa requirements which have been eased in recent years. However, reaching the levels of connecting traffic seen at other major Middle Eastern hubs will be a significant challenge in the years ahead.

\n

Charting Growth: Middle East LCCs Double Market Share in a Decade

\n

In 2024, LCCs accounted for 29% of capacity in the Middle East, having more than doubled in the last decade from just 13% of capacity in 2014. By comparison, globally, LCCs operated 34% of capacity in 2024.   

\n
\n

Tapping into a growing desire to fly within the region, LCC capacity has grown at a much faster rate than mainline capacity, increasing by an average of 11.5% year on year in the last decade, compared to a mainline growth rate of just 1.4% each year over the same time period.  

\n

The Middle East LCC market in 2024 has eight main players set out in the chart below. flydubai and flynas are largest, both with almost a quarter of LCC capacity each in the region. 

\n
\n
\n
\n

As expected, the majority of each of the main LCC’s capacity is focused on operating within the Middle East region, but as each carrier has evolved, so too have their networks and Africa represents an important market:
•    This is driven, to some extent, by the Saudi Arabia – Egypt market which accounts for a significant share – for Flyadeal, 96% of their African capacity operates to Egypt, and for flynas, 81%
•    This is an important market for Air Arabia too, with 73% of their Middle East – Africa capacity operating into Egypt 
Both flydubai and Air Arabia have a larger share of capacity operating into Asia, predominantly operating to the Indian subcontinent which serves the sizeable blue collar worker market that exists between the Indian subcontinent and the Middle East.   Their respective shares of their total Asia capacity into Southern Asia are: 
•    flydubai – 70% 
•    Air Arabia – 81%

\n

Geography also plays a part here, with LCCs preferring to maximize aircraft utilization each day, meaning short sectors of up to 4 hours are optimum in terms of network scheduling.  The proximity of India, North Africa, and Central Asia to the Middle East means there are many destinations within these countries and neighboring regions that fit this criteria. 

\n

Now that we’ve examined the expansion of networks and capacity in the Middle East, in the second part of this market analysis we’ll turn our focus to profitability and competition. Has this rapid growth resulted in a more competitive market? Do airlines remain profitable? And how does all this affect airfares for the consumer?

\n

Sign up for email updates below and you’ll be first to know when the second part of our Middle East aviation analysis goes live.

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Blog subscribe

","rssSummary":"

The Middle East has experienced an unparalleled era of growth, with airlines and airports consistently introducing innovative products and services to cater to the demands of a swiftly expanding market.

","rssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Middle%20East%20Aviation%202025%20pt1.jpg","scheduledUpdateDate":0,"screenshotPreviewTakenAt":1747828401524,"screenshotPreviewUrl":"https://cdn1.hubspot.net/hubshotv3/prod/e/0/0e3b0bca-6adf-405a-a8d4-ac6d05a9429f.png","sections":{},"securityState":"NONE","siteId":null,"slug":"blog/middle-east-aviation-growth-in-the-worlds-second-fastest-growing-market","stagedFrom":null,"state":"PUBLISHED","stateWhenDeleted":null,"structuredContentPageType":null,"structuredContentType":null,"styleOverrideId":null,"subcategory":"normal_blog_post","syncedWithBlogRoot":true,"tagIds":[66382214546,172583813798],"tagList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1644988033691,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":66382214546,"label":"Aviation Market Analysis","language":null,"name":"Aviation Market Analysis","portalId":490937,"slug":"aviation-market-analysis","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1645441799987},{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1720601101517,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":172583813798,"label":"Regional Market Focus","language":"en-gb","name":"Regional Market Focus","portalId":490937,"slug":"regional-market-focus","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1720601101517}],"tagNames":["Aviation Market Analysis","Regional Market Focus"],"teamPerms":[],"templatePath":"","templatePathForRender":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","textToAudioFileId":null,"textToAudioGenerationRequestId":null,"themePath":null,"themeSettingsValues":null,"title":"Middle East Aviation: Growth in the World’s Second-Fastest Growing Market","tmsId":null,"topicIds":[66382214546,172583813798],"topicList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1644988033691,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":66382214546,"label":"Aviation Market Analysis","language":null,"name":"Aviation Market Analysis","portalId":490937,"slug":"aviation-market-analysis","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1645441799987},{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1720601101517,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":172583813798,"label":"Regional Market Focus","language":"en-gb","name":"Regional Market Focus","portalId":490937,"slug":"regional-market-focus","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1720601101517}],"topicNames":["Aviation Market Analysis","Regional Market Focus"],"topics":[66382214546,172583813798],"translatedContent":{},"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"tweet":null,"tweetAt":null,"tweetImmediately":false,"unpublishedAt":0,"updated":1747828400500,"updatedById":47234281,"upsizeFeaturedImage":false,"url":"https://www.oag.com/blog/middle-east-aviation-growth-in-the-worlds-second-fastest-growing-market","useFeaturedImage":true,"userPerms":[],"views":null,"visibleToAll":null,"widgetContainers":{},"widgetcontainers":{},"widgets":{}},{"ab":false,"abStatus":null,"abTestId":null,"abVariation":false,"abVariationAutomated":false,"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog/may-2025s-airline-tech-innovations","afterPostBody":null,"aifeatures":null,"allowedSlugConflict":false,"analytics":null,"analyticsPageId":"190074928168","analyticsPageType":"blog-post","approvalStatus":null,"archived":false,"archivedAt":0,"archivedInDashboard":false,"areCommentsAllowed":false,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","author":null,"authorName":null,"authorUsername":null,"blogAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Blog_Post_Images/blog-logo-2019.png","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1443609427809,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"OAG","email":"","facebook":"https://www.facebook.com/OAGAviation","fullName":"OAG","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":3347574604,"label":"OAG","language":null,"linkedin":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/oag","name":"OAG","portalId":490937,"slug":"oag","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"https://twitter.com/OAG_Aviation","twitterUsername":"@OAG_Aviation","updated":1548849836281,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":"http://www.oag.com"},"blogAuthorId":3347574604,"blogPostAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Blog_Post_Images/blog-logo-2019.png","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1443609427809,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"OAG","email":"","facebook":"https://www.facebook.com/OAGAviation","fullName":"OAG","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":3347574604,"label":"OAG","language":null,"linkedin":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/oag","name":"OAG","portalId":490937,"slug":"oag","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"https://twitter.com/OAG_Aviation","twitterUsername":"@OAG_Aviation","updated":1548849836281,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":"http://www.oag.com"},"blogPostScheduleTaskUid":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailCampaignId":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailRetryCount":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailTaskUid":"DONE","blogPublishToSocialMediaTask":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blueprintTypeId":0,"businessUnitId":null,"campaign":null,"campaignName":null,"campaignUtm":null,"category":3,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"checkPostLevelAudienceAccessFirst":true,"clonedFrom":null,"composeBody":null,"compositionId":0,"contentAccessRuleIds":[],"contentAccessRuleTypes":[],"contentGroup":2547580647,"contentGroupId":2547580647,"contentTypeCategory":3,"contentTypeCategoryId":3,"contentTypeId":null,"created":1747125699733,"createdByAgent":null,"createdById":64413925,"createdTime":1747125699733,"crmObjectId":null,"css":{},"cssText":"","ctaClicks":null,"ctaViews":null,"currentState":"PUBLISHED","currentlyPublished":true,"deletedAt":0,"deletedBy":null,"deletedByEmail":null,"deletedById":null,"domain":"","dynamicPageDataSourceId":null,"dynamicPageDataSourceType":null,"dynamicPageHubDbTableId":null,"enableDomainStylesheets":null,"enableGoogleAmpOutputOverride":false,"enableLayoutStylesheets":null,"errors":[],"featuredImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/May%202025%20radar.jpg","featuredImageAltText":"","featuredImageHeight":900,"featuredImageLength":0,"featuredImageWidth":1600,"flexAreas":{},"folderId":null,"footerHtml":null,"freezeDate":1747306800000,"generateJsonLdEnabledOverride":true,"hasContentAccessRules":false,"hasUserChanges":true,"headHtml":null,"header":null,"htmlTitle":"May 2025's Airline-Tech Innovations | Future of Travel | OAG","id":190074928168,"includeDefaultCustomCss":null,"isCaptchaRequired":false,"isCrawlableByBots":false,"isDraft":false,"isInstanceLayoutPage":false,"isInstantEmailEnabled":true,"isPublished":true,"isSocialPublishingEnabled":false,"keywords":[],"label":"Three Airline-Tech Innovations Raising the AI Bar in May 2025","language":"en-gb","lastEditSessionId":null,"lastEditUpdateId":null,"layoutSections":{},"legacyBlogTabid":null,"legacyId":null,"legacyPostGuid":null,"linkRelCanonicalUrl":"","listTemplate":"generated_layouts/66381677173.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","mab":false,"mabExperimentId":null,"mabMaster":false,"mabVariant":false,"meta":{"html_title":"May 2025's Airline-Tech Innovations | Future of Travel | OAG","public_access_rules":[],"public_access_rules_enabled":false,"post_body":"

As we slowly approach the halfway point of the year, the airline industry continues to grapple with shifting geopolitical risks and volatile travel demand. Yet, innovation is showing no signs of slowing. If anything, the past few weeks have demonstrated how determined both established players and challengers are to rethink core elements of the air travel experience.

\n\n

From bold moves in AI-powered trip planning to foundational upgrades in how airlines operate behind the scenes, this month’s new product launches reflect a mix of ambition, speed, and long-term vision.

\n

Here are the three innovations we believe best capture that momentum:

\n

Innovation #1: Kayak Reimagines Travel Planning with New AI Suite

\n

Kayak has introduced a suite of new AI-powered tools aimed at making travel planning more intuitive and personalized. At first glance, this might seem like a standard ChatGPT-powered industry update. After all, numerous travel booking platforms (including many airlines and OTAs) now utilize AI chatbots to handle natural language search queries. However, Kayak's recent \"Ask Kayak\" initiative represents a promising step forward in genuinely redefining travel search.

\n

Here's how it works:

\n

\"Ask Kayak\" enables users to search using conversational language, for instance, \"Where can I fly nonstop from Berlin for under €300?\" But Kayak’s innovation doesn't stop there. The company has also introduced several connected features that significantly elevate the user experience:

\n\n

Why does this innovation stand out?

\n

Kayak's AI launch transcends the typical incremental updates commonly seen in the travel search space since the introduction of Generative AI. Rather than merely transitioning from keyword-based searches to conversational interfaces (as many competitors have done), Kayak integrates advanced tools that directly address long-standing pain points (such as the ongoing difficulty of comparing offers from multiple websites). This indicates a far deeper reimagining of travel metasearch.

\n

Moreover, Kayak has embraced a notably riskier and costlier strategy by developing an entirely new platform (kayak.ai) rather than simply augmenting its existing website. Described by Kayak's CEO as the company’s \"new test lab,\" this bold initiative underscores its serious commitment to revolutionizing the booking experience.

\n

Could Kayak’s ambitious strategy signify the first genuine AI disruption toward seamless and personalized travel interactions – something the industry has pursued for years?

\n

If so, airlines should closely monitor these developments, as Kayak's innovations could provide critical insights into the future evolution of airline.com websites and customer interactions.

\n

\"Kayak\"

\n

Innovation #2: Fliggy Launches Agentic AI for Fully Bookable Travel Itineraries

\n

Following Kayak’s reimagining of the metasearch experience, our second innovation comes from the other side of the globe, China. Online travel agency Fliggy (a part of Alibaba Group) is pushing the boundaries of AI-powered travel planning with the launch of its new assistant: AskMe.

\n

Here's how it works:

\n

Unlike typical ChatGPT-style interfaces, AskMe is powered by a system of intelligent agents designed to emulate the task execution and problem-solving abilities of professional travel consultants.

\n\n

The assistant leverages Fliggy’s proprietary travel datasets and runs on Alibaba’s in-house Qwen AI models. This setup ensures extremely low hallucination rates, as the system relies on verified, high-quality scenario data from within Fliggy’s platform, not inaccurate third-party sources.

\n

The output? A visually rich, multi-day itinerary with images, product details, maps, and direct booking links. AskMe also supports voice input in multiple dialects and even allows users to generate hand-drawn-style travel guides for social media sharing.

\n

Why does this innovation stand out?

\n\n

In short, Fliggy’s AskMe is a powerful reminder that building smarter AI travel agents isn’t just about fancy interfaces; it’s about connecting AI capabilities to rich, reliable, and real-time data ecosystems via agentic workflows that truly differentiate the traveler experience.

\n

\"Fliggy\"

\n

Innovation #3: Singapore Airlines Embraces a Multi-Partner AI Strategy

\n

While the first two innovations showcased how online travel platforms are redefining travel booking with AI, airlines themselves are not sitting idle. In fact, Singapore Airlines is taking a uniquely ambitious approach. The carrier is partnering with multiple leading tech players to deeply embed AI across both customer-facing and operational systems.

\n

what’s happening:

\n

In recent weeks, Singapore Airlines has announced not one but two major partnerships with leading AI providers: Salesforce and OpenAI. Each partnership targets a different layer of the airline’s operations, collectively showcasing a far-reaching and integrated AI vision.

\n

Partnership #1: Redefining Airline Customer Service

\n

In collaboration with Salesforce, Singapore Airlines is integrating a suite of AI tools into its customer service infrastructure:

\n\n

The result is faster, more personalized, and more proactive service, whether resolving irregular operations or responding to detailed customer questions.

\n

Partnership #2: Aiming For Operational Excellence

\n

Separately, Singapore Airlines became the first major global carrier to announce a formal partnership with OpenAI, aimed at enhancing not only customer service but also internal airline operations.

\n

With OpenAI’s models, the airline is building tools that can interpret text, audio, diagrams, and video, enabling a broader set of internal use cases, especially for flight crew scheduling and operational decision-making. The models are being embedded into deeper workflows to boost productivity, reduce complexity, and support more intelligent, data-informed decisions across departments.

\n

Why does this partnership approach stand out?

\n

Singapore Airlines isn’t just rolling out AI as a feature. Instead, it’s adopting it as a foundational layer of its digital architecture. By working with multiple best-in-class providers, SIA is ensuring that different parts of its business benefit from fit-for-purpose AI tools.

\n

In doing so, it sets a template for the industry. Other airlines, including Finnair, are also partnering with Salesforce on similar initiatives, signaling that foundational, cross-functional AI adoption may become the norm rather than the exception.

\n

\"Singapore\"

\n

This closes out our May edition.

\n

It’s exciting to see how AI is being pushed forward by various stakeholders in aviation, including those rooted in the technology space. We’ll be keeping a close eye on more moves like these in the weeks to come.

\n

GET YOUR WEEK OFF TO A FLYING START Receive a weekly digest packed full of our latest aviation insights and analysis.

","rss_summary":"

As we slowly approach the halfway point of the year, the airline industry continues to grapple with shifting geopolitical risks and volatile travel demand. Yet, innovation is showing no signs of slowing. If anything, the past few weeks have demonstrated how determined both established players and challengers are to rethink core elements of the air travel experience.

\n","tag_ids":[5656435279],"topic_ids":[5656435279],"enable_google_amp_output_override":false,"generate_json_ld_enabled":true,"post_summary":"

As we slowly approach the halfway point of the year, the airline industry continues to grapple with shifting geopolitical risks and volatile travel demand. Yet, innovation is showing no signs of slowing. If anything, the past few weeks have demonstrated how determined both established players and challengers are to rethink core elements of the air travel experience.

\n","blog_post_schedule_task_uid":null,"blog_publish_to_social_media_task":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blog_publish_instant_email_task_uid":"DONE","blog_publish_instant_email_campaign_id":null,"blog_publish_instant_email_retry_count":null,"rss_body":"

As we slowly approach the halfway point of the year, the airline industry continues to grapple with shifting geopolitical risks and volatile travel demand. Yet, innovation is showing no signs of slowing. If anything, the past few weeks have demonstrated how determined both established players and challengers are to rethink core elements of the air travel experience.

\n\n

From bold moves in AI-powered trip planning to foundational upgrades in how airlines operate behind the scenes, this month’s new product launches reflect a mix of ambition, speed, and long-term vision.

\n

Here are the three innovations we believe best capture that momentum:

\n

Innovation #1: Kayak Reimagines Travel Planning with New AI Suite

\n

Kayak has introduced a suite of new AI-powered tools aimed at making travel planning more intuitive and personalized. At first glance, this might seem like a standard ChatGPT-powered industry update. After all, numerous travel booking platforms (including many airlines and OTAs) now utilize AI chatbots to handle natural language search queries. However, Kayak's recent \"Ask Kayak\" initiative represents a promising step forward in genuinely redefining travel search.

\n

Here's how it works:

\n

\"Ask Kayak\" enables users to search using conversational language, for instance, \"Where can I fly nonstop from Berlin for under €300?\" But Kayak’s innovation doesn't stop there. The company has also introduced several connected features that significantly elevate the user experience:

\n\n

Why does this innovation stand out?

\n

Kayak's AI launch transcends the typical incremental updates commonly seen in the travel search space since the introduction of Generative AI. Rather than merely transitioning from keyword-based searches to conversational interfaces (as many competitors have done), Kayak integrates advanced tools that directly address long-standing pain points (such as the ongoing difficulty of comparing offers from multiple websites). This indicates a far deeper reimagining of travel metasearch.

\n

Moreover, Kayak has embraced a notably riskier and costlier strategy by developing an entirely new platform (kayak.ai) rather than simply augmenting its existing website. Described by Kayak's CEO as the company’s \"new test lab,\" this bold initiative underscores its serious commitment to revolutionizing the booking experience.

\n

Could Kayak’s ambitious strategy signify the first genuine AI disruption toward seamless and personalized travel interactions – something the industry has pursued for years?

\n

If so, airlines should closely monitor these developments, as Kayak's innovations could provide critical insights into the future evolution of airline.com websites and customer interactions.

\n

\"Kayak\"

\n

Innovation #2: Fliggy Launches Agentic AI for Fully Bookable Travel Itineraries

\n

Following Kayak’s reimagining of the metasearch experience, our second innovation comes from the other side of the globe, China. Online travel agency Fliggy (a part of Alibaba Group) is pushing the boundaries of AI-powered travel planning with the launch of its new assistant: AskMe.

\n

Here's how it works:

\n

Unlike typical ChatGPT-style interfaces, AskMe is powered by a system of intelligent agents designed to emulate the task execution and problem-solving abilities of professional travel consultants.

\n\n

The assistant leverages Fliggy’s proprietary travel datasets and runs on Alibaba’s in-house Qwen AI models. This setup ensures extremely low hallucination rates, as the system relies on verified, high-quality scenario data from within Fliggy’s platform, not inaccurate third-party sources.

\n

The output? A visually rich, multi-day itinerary with images, product details, maps, and direct booking links. AskMe also supports voice input in multiple dialects and even allows users to generate hand-drawn-style travel guides for social media sharing.

\n

Why does this innovation stand out?

\n\n

In short, Fliggy’s AskMe is a powerful reminder that building smarter AI travel agents isn’t just about fancy interfaces; it’s about connecting AI capabilities to rich, reliable, and real-time data ecosystems via agentic workflows that truly differentiate the traveler experience.

\n

\"Fliggy\"

\n

Innovation #3: Singapore Airlines Embraces a Multi-Partner AI Strategy

\n

While the first two innovations showcased how online travel platforms are redefining travel booking with AI, airlines themselves are not sitting idle. In fact, Singapore Airlines is taking a uniquely ambitious approach. The carrier is partnering with multiple leading tech players to deeply embed AI across both customer-facing and operational systems.

\n

what’s happening:

\n

In recent weeks, Singapore Airlines has announced not one but two major partnerships with leading AI providers: Salesforce and OpenAI. Each partnership targets a different layer of the airline’s operations, collectively showcasing a far-reaching and integrated AI vision.

\n

Partnership #1: Redefining Airline Customer Service

\n

In collaboration with Salesforce, Singapore Airlines is integrating a suite of AI tools into its customer service infrastructure:

\n\n

The result is faster, more personalized, and more proactive service, whether resolving irregular operations or responding to detailed customer questions.

\n

Partnership #2: Aiming For Operational Excellence

\n

Separately, Singapore Airlines became the first major global carrier to announce a formal partnership with OpenAI, aimed at enhancing not only customer service but also internal airline operations.

\n

With OpenAI’s models, the airline is building tools that can interpret text, audio, diagrams, and video, enabling a broader set of internal use cases, especially for flight crew scheduling and operational decision-making. The models are being embedded into deeper workflows to boost productivity, reduce complexity, and support more intelligent, data-informed decisions across departments.

\n

Why does this partnership approach stand out?

\n

Singapore Airlines isn’t just rolling out AI as a feature. Instead, it’s adopting it as a foundational layer of its digital architecture. By working with multiple best-in-class providers, SIA is ensuring that different parts of its business benefit from fit-for-purpose AI tools.

\n

In doing so, it sets a template for the industry. Other airlines, including Finnair, are also partnering with Salesforce on similar initiatives, signaling that foundational, cross-functional AI adoption may become the norm rather than the exception.

\n

\"Singapore\"

\n

This closes out our May edition.

\n

It’s exciting to see how AI is being pushed forward by various stakeholders in aviation, including those rooted in the technology space. We’ll be keeping a close eye on more moves like these in the weeks to come.

\n

GET YOUR WEEK OFF TO A FLYING START Receive a weekly digest packed full of our latest aviation insights and analysis.

","keywords":[],"composition_id":0,"is_crawlable_by_bots":false,"use_featured_image":true,"published_at":1747306802225,"head_html":null,"footer_html":null,"attached_stylesheets":[],"enable_domain_stylesheets":null,"include_default_custom_css":null,"layout_sections":{},"past_mab_experiment_ids":[],"deleted_by":null,"featured_image_alt_text":"","enable_layout_stylesheets":null,"tweet":null,"tweet_at":null,"campaign_name":null,"campaign_utm":null,"meta_keywords":null,"meta_description":"Explore May's top airline-tech innovations, from AI-driven trip planning to operational excellence, showcasing how Kayak, Fliggy, and Singapore Airlines are transforming the travel landscape.","tweet_immediately":false,"publish_immediately":false,"security_state":"NONE","scheduled_update_date":0,"placement_guids":[],"property_for_dynamic_page_title":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_slug":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_meta_description":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_featured_image":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_canonical_url":null,"preview_image_src":null,"legacy_blog_tabid":null,"legacy_post_guid":null,"performable_variation_letter":null,"style_override_id":null,"has_user_changes":true,"css":{},"css_text":"","unpublished_at":0,"published_by_id":11440745,"allowed_slug_conflict":false,"ai_features":null,"link_rel_canonical_url":"","page_redirected":false,"page_expiry_enabled":null,"page_expiry_date":null,"page_expiry_redirect_id":null,"page_expiry_redirect_url":null,"deleted_by_id":null,"state_when_deleted":null,"cloned_from":null,"staged_from":null,"personas":[],"compose_body":null,"featured_image":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/May%202025%20radar.jpg","featured_image_width":1600,"featured_image_height":900,"publish_timezone_offset":null,"theme_settings_values":null,"password":null,"header":null,"last_edit_session_id":null,"last_edit_update_id":null,"created_by_agent":null},"metaDescription":"Explore May's top airline-tech innovations, from AI-driven trip planning to operational excellence, showcasing how Kayak, Fliggy, and Singapore Airlines are transforming the travel landscape.","metaKeywords":null,"name":"Three Airline-Tech Innovations Raising the AI Bar in May 2025","nextPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Transatlantic%20ASKs%20or.jpg","nextPostFeaturedImageAltText":"Transatlantic Aviation Market Measuring by ASKs or Seats","nextPostName":"Transatlantic Air Travel Demand This Summer: Measure by ASKs or Seats?","nextPostSlug":"blog/transatlantic-air-travel-demand-this-summer-measure-by-asks-or-seats","pageExpiryDate":null,"pageExpiryEnabled":null,"pageExpiryRedirectId":null,"pageExpiryRedirectUrl":null,"pageRedirected":false,"pageTitle":"May 2025's Airline-Tech Innovations | Future of Travel | OAG","parentBlog":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog","allowComments":false,"ampBodyColor":"#404040","ampBodyFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampBodyFontSize":"18","ampCustomCss":"","ampHeaderBackgroundColor":"#ffffff","ampHeaderColor":"#1e1e1e","ampHeaderFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampHeaderFontSize":"36","ampLinkColor":"#416bb3","ampLogoAlt":"OAG Black 2018","ampLogoHeight":594,"ampLogoSrc":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/OAG%20Black%202018.png","ampLogoWidth":945,"analyticsPageId":2547580647,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","businessUnitId":null,"captchaAfterDays":7,"captchaAlways":false,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"closeCommentsOlder":0,"commentDateFormat":"medium","commentFormGuid":"5fddd154-8ed7-470d-bdc0-b3267efba414","commentMaxThreadDepth":4,"commentModeration":false,"commentNotificationEmails":["katy.ludwell@oag.com","hiten.patel@oag.com"],"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentVerificationText":"Thank you for your comment. It has been received.","cosObjectType":"BLOG","created":1424960760000,"createdDateTime":1424960760000,"dailyNotificationEmailId":"2547580932","dateFormattingLanguage":"en_GB","defaultGroupStyleId":"","defaultNotificationFromName":"","defaultNotificationReplyTo":"","deletedAt":0,"description":"Take a look at the OAG Aviation Blog for the latest airline travel news, thought leadership on topics affecting the industry and aviation infographics.","domain":"","domainWhenPublished":"www.oag.com","emailApiSubscriptionId":700840,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"enableSocialAutoPublishing":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":true,"header":null,"htmlFooter":"","htmlFooterIsShared":true,"htmlHead":"","htmlHeadIsShared":true,"htmlKeywords":[],"htmlTitle":"The OAG Blog","id":2547580647,"ilsSubscriptionListsByType":{"daily":2928,"instant":2925,"monthly":2923,"weekly":2930},"instantNotificationEmailId":"27411260688","itemLayoutId":null,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"itemTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","label":"Blog","language":"en-gb","legacyGuid":null,"legacyModuleId":null,"legacyTabId":null,"listingLayoutId":null,"listingPageId":98966560049,"listingTemplatePath":"generated_layouts/66381677173.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","monthFilterFormat":"MMMM yyyy","monthlyNotificationEmailId":null,"name":"Blog","parentBlogUpdateTaskId":null,"portalId":490937,"postHtmlFooter":"","postHtmlHead":"","postsPerListingPage":1000,"postsPerRssFeed":10,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publicTitle":"The OAG Blog","publishDateFormat":"dd MMMM yyyy","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","rootUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog","rssCustomFeed":null,"rssDescription":null,"rssItemFooter":null,"rssItemHeader":null,"settingsOverrides":{"itemLayoutId":true,"itemTemplatePath":true,"itemTemplateIsShared":true,"listingLayoutId":true,"listingTemplatePath":true,"postsPerListingPage":false,"showSummaryInListing":false,"useFeaturedImageInSummary":false,"htmlHead":false,"postHtmlHead":false,"htmlHeadIsShared":false,"htmlFooter":false,"listingPageHtmlFooter":false,"postHtmlFooter":false,"htmlFooterIsShared":false,"attachedStylesheets":false,"postsPerRssFeed":false,"showSummaryInRss":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummariesInEmails":false,"allowComments":false,"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentModeration":false,"closeCommentsOlder":false,"commentNotificationEmails":false,"commentMaxThreadDepth":false,"commentVerificationText":false,"socialAccountTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"ampLogoSrc":false,"ampLogoHeight":false,"ampLogoWidth":false,"ampLogoAlt":false,"ampHeaderFont":false,"ampHeaderFontSize":false,"ampHeaderColor":false,"ampHeaderBackgroundColor":false,"ampBodyFont":false,"ampBodyFontSize":false,"ampBodyColor":false,"ampLinkColor":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false},"showSocialLinkFacebook":true,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":true,"showSocialLinkTwitter":true,"showSummaryInEmails":true,"showSummaryInListing":true,"showSummaryInRss":true,"siteId":0,"slug":"blog","socialAccountTwitter":"@OAG_Aviation","state":null,"subscriptionContactsProperty":"blog_oag_blog_subscription","subscriptionEmailType":null,"subscriptionFormGuid":"fe2ff6b0-4487-4dcf-8851-cab226ede82d","subscriptionListsByType":{"daily":7,"instant":6,"monthly":5,"weekly":8},"title":null,"translatedFromId":136596164207,"translations":{"en":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/en/blog","id":136596164207,"language":"en","masterId":null,"name":"Blog","publicAccessRules":[{"ids":[],"ilsIds":[],"type":"PUBLIC"}],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"slug":"en/blog"}},"updated":1696334483549,"updatedDateTime":1696334483549,"urlBase":"www.oag.com/blog","urlSegments":{},"useFeaturedImageInSummary":true,"usesDefaultTemplate":false,"weeklyNotificationEmailId":"2547580962"},"password":null,"pastMabExperimentIds":[],"performableGuid":null,"performableVariationLetter":null,"personalizationStrategyId":null,"personalizationVariantStatus":null,"personas":[],"placementGuids":[],"portableKey":null,"portalId":490937,"position":null,"postBody":"

As we slowly approach the halfway point of the year, the airline industry continues to grapple with shifting geopolitical risks and volatile travel demand. Yet, innovation is showing no signs of slowing. If anything, the past few weeks have demonstrated how determined both established players and challengers are to rethink core elements of the air travel experience.

\n\n

From bold moves in AI-powered trip planning to foundational upgrades in how airlines operate behind the scenes, this month’s new product launches reflect a mix of ambition, speed, and long-term vision.

\n

Here are the three innovations we believe best capture that momentum:

\n

Innovation #1: Kayak Reimagines Travel Planning with New AI Suite

\n

Kayak has introduced a suite of new AI-powered tools aimed at making travel planning more intuitive and personalized. At first glance, this might seem like a standard ChatGPT-powered industry update. After all, numerous travel booking platforms (including many airlines and OTAs) now utilize AI chatbots to handle natural language search queries. However, Kayak's recent \"Ask Kayak\" initiative represents a promising step forward in genuinely redefining travel search.

\n

Here's how it works:

\n

\"Ask Kayak\" enables users to search using conversational language, for instance, \"Where can I fly nonstop from Berlin for under €300?\" But Kayak’s innovation doesn't stop there. The company has also introduced several connected features that significantly elevate the user experience:

\n\n

Why does this innovation stand out?

\n

Kayak's AI launch transcends the typical incremental updates commonly seen in the travel search space since the introduction of Generative AI. Rather than merely transitioning from keyword-based searches to conversational interfaces (as many competitors have done), Kayak integrates advanced tools that directly address long-standing pain points (such as the ongoing difficulty of comparing offers from multiple websites). This indicates a far deeper reimagining of travel metasearch.

\n

Moreover, Kayak has embraced a notably riskier and costlier strategy by developing an entirely new platform (kayak.ai) rather than simply augmenting its existing website. Described by Kayak's CEO as the company’s \"new test lab,\" this bold initiative underscores its serious commitment to revolutionizing the booking experience.

\n

Could Kayak’s ambitious strategy signify the first genuine AI disruption toward seamless and personalized travel interactions – something the industry has pursued for years?

\n

If so, airlines should closely monitor these developments, as Kayak's innovations could provide critical insights into the future evolution of airline.com websites and customer interactions.

\n

\"Kayak\"

\n

Innovation #2: Fliggy Launches Agentic AI for Fully Bookable Travel Itineraries

\n

Following Kayak’s reimagining of the metasearch experience, our second innovation comes from the other side of the globe, China. Online travel agency Fliggy (a part of Alibaba Group) is pushing the boundaries of AI-powered travel planning with the launch of its new assistant: AskMe.

\n

Here's how it works:

\n

Unlike typical ChatGPT-style interfaces, AskMe is powered by a system of intelligent agents designed to emulate the task execution and problem-solving abilities of professional travel consultants.

\n\n

The assistant leverages Fliggy’s proprietary travel datasets and runs on Alibaba’s in-house Qwen AI models. This setup ensures extremely low hallucination rates, as the system relies on verified, high-quality scenario data from within Fliggy’s platform, not inaccurate third-party sources.

\n

The output? A visually rich, multi-day itinerary with images, product details, maps, and direct booking links. AskMe also supports voice input in multiple dialects and even allows users to generate hand-drawn-style travel guides for social media sharing.

\n

Why does this innovation stand out?

\n\n

In short, Fliggy’s AskMe is a powerful reminder that building smarter AI travel agents isn’t just about fancy interfaces; it’s about connecting AI capabilities to rich, reliable, and real-time data ecosystems via agentic workflows that truly differentiate the traveler experience.

\n

\"Fliggy\"

\n

Innovation #3: Singapore Airlines Embraces a Multi-Partner AI Strategy

\n

While the first two innovations showcased how online travel platforms are redefining travel booking with AI, airlines themselves are not sitting idle. In fact, Singapore Airlines is taking a uniquely ambitious approach. The carrier is partnering with multiple leading tech players to deeply embed AI across both customer-facing and operational systems.

\n

what’s happening:

\n

In recent weeks, Singapore Airlines has announced not one but two major partnerships with leading AI providers: Salesforce and OpenAI. Each partnership targets a different layer of the airline’s operations, collectively showcasing a far-reaching and integrated AI vision.

\n

Partnership #1: Redefining Airline Customer Service

\n

In collaboration with Salesforce, Singapore Airlines is integrating a suite of AI tools into its customer service infrastructure:

\n\n

The result is faster, more personalized, and more proactive service, whether resolving irregular operations or responding to detailed customer questions.

\n

Partnership #2: Aiming For Operational Excellence

\n

Separately, Singapore Airlines became the first major global carrier to announce a formal partnership with OpenAI, aimed at enhancing not only customer service but also internal airline operations.

\n

With OpenAI’s models, the airline is building tools that can interpret text, audio, diagrams, and video, enabling a broader set of internal use cases, especially for flight crew scheduling and operational decision-making. The models are being embedded into deeper workflows to boost productivity, reduce complexity, and support more intelligent, data-informed decisions across departments.

\n

Why does this partnership approach stand out?

\n

Singapore Airlines isn’t just rolling out AI as a feature. Instead, it’s adopting it as a foundational layer of its digital architecture. By working with multiple best-in-class providers, SIA is ensuring that different parts of its business benefit from fit-for-purpose AI tools.

\n

In doing so, it sets a template for the industry. Other airlines, including Finnair, are also partnering with Salesforce on similar initiatives, signaling that foundational, cross-functional AI adoption may become the norm rather than the exception.

\n

\"Singapore\"

\n

This closes out our May edition.

\n

It’s exciting to see how AI is being pushed forward by various stakeholders in aviation, including those rooted in the technology space. We’ll be keeping a close eye on more moves like these in the weeks to come.

\n

GET YOUR WEEK OFF TO A FLYING START Receive a weekly digest packed full of our latest aviation insights and analysis.

","postBodyRss":"

As we slowly approach the halfway point of the year, the airline industry continues to grapple with shifting geopolitical risks and volatile travel demand. Yet, innovation is showing no signs of slowing. If anything, the past few weeks have demonstrated how determined both established players and challengers are to rethink core elements of the air travel experience.

\n\n

From bold moves in AI-powered trip planning to foundational upgrades in how airlines operate behind the scenes, this month’s new product launches reflect a mix of ambition, speed, and long-term vision.

\n

Here are the three innovations we believe best capture that momentum:

\n

Innovation #1: Kayak Reimagines Travel Planning with New AI Suite

\n

Kayak has introduced a suite of new AI-powered tools aimed at making travel planning more intuitive and personalized. At first glance, this might seem like a standard ChatGPT-powered industry update. After all, numerous travel booking platforms (including many airlines and OTAs) now utilize AI chatbots to handle natural language search queries. However, Kayak's recent \"Ask Kayak\" initiative represents a promising step forward in genuinely redefining travel search.

\n

Here's how it works:

\n

\"Ask Kayak\" enables users to search using conversational language, for instance, \"Where can I fly nonstop from Berlin for under €300?\" But Kayak’s innovation doesn't stop there. The company has also introduced several connected features that significantly elevate the user experience:

\n\n

Why does this innovation stand out?

\n

Kayak's AI launch transcends the typical incremental updates commonly seen in the travel search space since the introduction of Generative AI. Rather than merely transitioning from keyword-based searches to conversational interfaces (as many competitors have done), Kayak integrates advanced tools that directly address long-standing pain points (such as the ongoing difficulty of comparing offers from multiple websites). This indicates a far deeper reimagining of travel metasearch.

\n

Moreover, Kayak has embraced a notably riskier and costlier strategy by developing an entirely new platform (kayak.ai) rather than simply augmenting its existing website. Described by Kayak's CEO as the company’s \"new test lab,\" this bold initiative underscores its serious commitment to revolutionizing the booking experience.

\n

Could Kayak’s ambitious strategy signify the first genuine AI disruption toward seamless and personalized travel interactions – something the industry has pursued for years?

\n

If so, airlines should closely monitor these developments, as Kayak's innovations could provide critical insights into the future evolution of airline.com websites and customer interactions.

\n

\"Kayak\"

\n

Innovation #2: Fliggy Launches Agentic AI for Fully Bookable Travel Itineraries

\n

Following Kayak’s reimagining of the metasearch experience, our second innovation comes from the other side of the globe, China. Online travel agency Fliggy (a part of Alibaba Group) is pushing the boundaries of AI-powered travel planning with the launch of its new assistant: AskMe.

\n

Here's how it works:

\n

Unlike typical ChatGPT-style interfaces, AskMe is powered by a system of intelligent agents designed to emulate the task execution and problem-solving abilities of professional travel consultants.

\n\n

The assistant leverages Fliggy’s proprietary travel datasets and runs on Alibaba’s in-house Qwen AI models. This setup ensures extremely low hallucination rates, as the system relies on verified, high-quality scenario data from within Fliggy’s platform, not inaccurate third-party sources.

\n

The output? A visually rich, multi-day itinerary with images, product details, maps, and direct booking links. AskMe also supports voice input in multiple dialects and even allows users to generate hand-drawn-style travel guides for social media sharing.

\n

Why does this innovation stand out?

\n\n

In short, Fliggy’s AskMe is a powerful reminder that building smarter AI travel agents isn’t just about fancy interfaces; it’s about connecting AI capabilities to rich, reliable, and real-time data ecosystems via agentic workflows that truly differentiate the traveler experience.

\n

\"Fliggy\"

\n

Innovation #3: Singapore Airlines Embraces a Multi-Partner AI Strategy

\n

While the first two innovations showcased how online travel platforms are redefining travel booking with AI, airlines themselves are not sitting idle. In fact, Singapore Airlines is taking a uniquely ambitious approach. The carrier is partnering with multiple leading tech players to deeply embed AI across both customer-facing and operational systems.

\n

what’s happening:

\n

In recent weeks, Singapore Airlines has announced not one but two major partnerships with leading AI providers: Salesforce and OpenAI. Each partnership targets a different layer of the airline’s operations, collectively showcasing a far-reaching and integrated AI vision.

\n

Partnership #1: Redefining Airline Customer Service

\n

In collaboration with Salesforce, Singapore Airlines is integrating a suite of AI tools into its customer service infrastructure:

\n\n

The result is faster, more personalized, and more proactive service, whether resolving irregular operations or responding to detailed customer questions.

\n

Partnership #2: Aiming For Operational Excellence

\n

Separately, Singapore Airlines became the first major global carrier to announce a formal partnership with OpenAI, aimed at enhancing not only customer service but also internal airline operations.

\n

With OpenAI’s models, the airline is building tools that can interpret text, audio, diagrams, and video, enabling a broader set of internal use cases, especially for flight crew scheduling and operational decision-making. The models are being embedded into deeper workflows to boost productivity, reduce complexity, and support more intelligent, data-informed decisions across departments.

\n

Why does this partnership approach stand out?

\n

Singapore Airlines isn’t just rolling out AI as a feature. Instead, it’s adopting it as a foundational layer of its digital architecture. By working with multiple best-in-class providers, SIA is ensuring that different parts of its business benefit from fit-for-purpose AI tools.

\n

In doing so, it sets a template for the industry. Other airlines, including Finnair, are also partnering with Salesforce on similar initiatives, signaling that foundational, cross-functional AI adoption may become the norm rather than the exception.

\n

\"Singapore\"

\n

This closes out our May edition.

\n

It’s exciting to see how AI is being pushed forward by various stakeholders in aviation, including those rooted in the technology space. We’ll be keeping a close eye on more moves like these in the weeks to come.

\n

GET YOUR WEEK OFF TO A FLYING START Receive a weekly digest packed full of our latest aviation insights and analysis.

","postEmailContent":"

As we slowly approach the halfway point of the year, the airline industry continues to grapple with shifting geopolitical risks and volatile travel demand. Yet, innovation is showing no signs of slowing. If anything, the past few weeks have demonstrated how determined both established players and challengers are to rethink core elements of the air travel experience.

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/May%202025%20radar.jpg","postListContent":"

As we slowly approach the halfway point of the year, the airline industry continues to grapple with shifting geopolitical risks and volatile travel demand. Yet, innovation is showing no signs of slowing. If anything, the past few weeks have demonstrated how determined both established players and challengers are to rethink core elements of the air travel experience.

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/May%202025%20radar.jpg","postRssContent":"

As we slowly approach the halfway point of the year, the airline industry continues to grapple with shifting geopolitical risks and volatile travel demand. Yet, innovation is showing no signs of slowing. If anything, the past few weeks have demonstrated how determined both established players and challengers are to rethink core elements of the air travel experience.

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/May%202025%20radar.jpg","postSummary":"

As we slowly approach the halfway point of the year, the airline industry continues to grapple with shifting geopolitical risks and volatile travel demand. Yet, innovation is showing no signs of slowing. If anything, the past few weeks have demonstrated how determined both established players and challengers are to rethink core elements of the air travel experience.

\n","postSummaryRss":"

As we slowly approach the halfway point of the year, the airline industry continues to grapple with shifting geopolitical risks and volatile travel demand. Yet, innovation is showing no signs of slowing. If anything, the past few weeks have demonstrated how determined both established players and challengers are to rethink core elements of the air travel experience.

","postTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"ZJxwJzMI","previousPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Middle%20East%20Aviation%202025%20pt1.jpg","previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":"Middle East Aviation 2025 Growth","previousPostName":"Middle East Aviation: Growth in the World’s Second-Fastest Growing Market","previousPostSlug":"blog/middle-east-aviation-growth-in-the-worlds-second-fastest-growing-market","processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1747306800000,"publishDateLocalTime":1747306800000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1747306800000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":"en_GB"},"publishImmediately":false,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1747306802225,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":11440745,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog/may-2025s-airline-tech-innovations","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

As we slowly approach the halfway point of the year, the airline industry continues to grapple with shifting geopolitical risks and volatile travel demand. Yet, innovation is showing no signs of slowing. If anything, the past few weeks have demonstrated how determined both established players and challengers are to rethink core elements of the air travel experience.

\n\n

From bold moves in AI-powered trip planning to foundational upgrades in how airlines operate behind the scenes, this month’s new product launches reflect a mix of ambition, speed, and long-term vision.

\n

Here are the three innovations we believe best capture that momentum:

\n

Innovation #1: Kayak Reimagines Travel Planning with New AI Suite

\n

Kayak has introduced a suite of new AI-powered tools aimed at making travel planning more intuitive and personalized. At first glance, this might seem like a standard ChatGPT-powered industry update. After all, numerous travel booking platforms (including many airlines and OTAs) now utilize AI chatbots to handle natural language search queries. However, Kayak's recent \"Ask Kayak\" initiative represents a promising step forward in genuinely redefining travel search.

\n

Here's how it works:

\n

\"Ask Kayak\" enables users to search using conversational language, for instance, \"Where can I fly nonstop from Berlin for under €300?\" But Kayak’s innovation doesn't stop there. The company has also introduced several connected features that significantly elevate the user experience:

\n\n

Why does this innovation stand out?

\n

Kayak's AI launch transcends the typical incremental updates commonly seen in the travel search space since the introduction of Generative AI. Rather than merely transitioning from keyword-based searches to conversational interfaces (as many competitors have done), Kayak integrates advanced tools that directly address long-standing pain points (such as the ongoing difficulty of comparing offers from multiple websites). This indicates a far deeper reimagining of travel metasearch.

\n

Moreover, Kayak has embraced a notably riskier and costlier strategy by developing an entirely new platform (kayak.ai) rather than simply augmenting its existing website. Described by Kayak's CEO as the company’s \"new test lab,\" this bold initiative underscores its serious commitment to revolutionizing the booking experience.

\n

Could Kayak’s ambitious strategy signify the first genuine AI disruption toward seamless and personalized travel interactions – something the industry has pursued for years?

\n

If so, airlines should closely monitor these developments, as Kayak's innovations could provide critical insights into the future evolution of airline.com websites and customer interactions.

\n

\"Kayak\"

\n

Innovation #2: Fliggy Launches Agentic AI for Fully Bookable Travel Itineraries

\n

Following Kayak’s reimagining of the metasearch experience, our second innovation comes from the other side of the globe, China. Online travel agency Fliggy (a part of Alibaba Group) is pushing the boundaries of AI-powered travel planning with the launch of its new assistant: AskMe.

\n

Here's how it works:

\n

Unlike typical ChatGPT-style interfaces, AskMe is powered by a system of intelligent agents designed to emulate the task execution and problem-solving abilities of professional travel consultants.

\n\n

The assistant leverages Fliggy’s proprietary travel datasets and runs on Alibaba’s in-house Qwen AI models. This setup ensures extremely low hallucination rates, as the system relies on verified, high-quality scenario data from within Fliggy’s platform, not inaccurate third-party sources.

\n

The output? A visually rich, multi-day itinerary with images, product details, maps, and direct booking links. AskMe also supports voice input in multiple dialects and even allows users to generate hand-drawn-style travel guides for social media sharing.

\n

Why does this innovation stand out?

\n\n

In short, Fliggy’s AskMe is a powerful reminder that building smarter AI travel agents isn’t just about fancy interfaces; it’s about connecting AI capabilities to rich, reliable, and real-time data ecosystems via agentic workflows that truly differentiate the traveler experience.

\n

\"Fliggy\"

\n

Innovation #3: Singapore Airlines Embraces a Multi-Partner AI Strategy

\n

While the first two innovations showcased how online travel platforms are redefining travel booking with AI, airlines themselves are not sitting idle. In fact, Singapore Airlines is taking a uniquely ambitious approach. The carrier is partnering with multiple leading tech players to deeply embed AI across both customer-facing and operational systems.

\n

what’s happening:

\n

In recent weeks, Singapore Airlines has announced not one but two major partnerships with leading AI providers: Salesforce and OpenAI. Each partnership targets a different layer of the airline’s operations, collectively showcasing a far-reaching and integrated AI vision.

\n

Partnership #1: Redefining Airline Customer Service

\n

In collaboration with Salesforce, Singapore Airlines is integrating a suite of AI tools into its customer service infrastructure:

\n\n

The result is faster, more personalized, and more proactive service, whether resolving irregular operations or responding to detailed customer questions.

\n

Partnership #2: Aiming For Operational Excellence

\n

Separately, Singapore Airlines became the first major global carrier to announce a formal partnership with OpenAI, aimed at enhancing not only customer service but also internal airline operations.

\n

With OpenAI’s models, the airline is building tools that can interpret text, audio, diagrams, and video, enabling a broader set of internal use cases, especially for flight crew scheduling and operational decision-making. The models are being embedded into deeper workflows to boost productivity, reduce complexity, and support more intelligent, data-informed decisions across departments.

\n

Why does this partnership approach stand out?

\n

Singapore Airlines isn’t just rolling out AI as a feature. Instead, it’s adopting it as a foundational layer of its digital architecture. By working with multiple best-in-class providers, SIA is ensuring that different parts of its business benefit from fit-for-purpose AI tools.

\n

In doing so, it sets a template for the industry. Other airlines, including Finnair, are also partnering with Salesforce on similar initiatives, signaling that foundational, cross-functional AI adoption may become the norm rather than the exception.

\n

\"Singapore\"

\n

This closes out our May edition.

\n

It’s exciting to see how AI is being pushed forward by various stakeholders in aviation, including those rooted in the technology space. We’ll be keeping a close eye on more moves like these in the weeks to come.

\n

GET YOUR WEEK OFF TO A FLYING START Receive a weekly digest packed full of our latest aviation insights and analysis.

","rssSummary":"

As we slowly approach the halfway point of the year, the airline industry continues to grapple with shifting geopolitical risks and volatile travel demand. Yet, innovation is showing no signs of slowing. If anything, the past few weeks have demonstrated how determined both established players and challengers are to rethink core elements of the air travel experience.

\n","rssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/May%202025%20radar.jpg","scheduledUpdateDate":0,"screenshotPreviewTakenAt":1747306803203,"screenshotPreviewUrl":"https://cdn1.hubspot.net/hubshotv3/prod/e/0/bb705c66-5ab9-4dc4-9fa6-44c121ada2a7.png","sections":{},"securityState":"NONE","siteId":null,"slug":"blog/may-2025s-airline-tech-innovations","stagedFrom":null,"state":"PUBLISHED","stateWhenDeleted":null,"structuredContentPageType":null,"structuredContentType":null,"styleOverrideId":null,"subcategory":"normal_blog_post","syncedWithBlogRoot":true,"tagIds":[5656435279],"tagList":[{"categoryId":0,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1521799350479,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":5656435279,"label":"Future of Travel","language":null,"name":"Future of Travel","portalId":490937,"slug":"future-of-travel","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1648130114543}],"tagNames":["Future of Travel"],"teamPerms":[],"templatePath":"","templatePathForRender":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","textToAudioFileId":null,"textToAudioGenerationRequestId":null,"themePath":null,"themeSettingsValues":null,"title":"May 2025's Airline-Tech Innovations | Future of Travel | OAG","tmsId":null,"topicIds":[5656435279],"topicList":[{"categoryId":0,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1521799350479,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":5656435279,"label":"Future of Travel","language":null,"name":"Future of Travel","portalId":490937,"slug":"future-of-travel","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1648130114543}],"topicNames":["Future of Travel"],"topics":[5656435279],"translatedContent":{},"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"tweet":null,"tweetAt":null,"tweetImmediately":false,"unpublishedAt":0,"updated":1747306803144,"updatedById":11440745,"upsizeFeaturedImage":false,"url":"https://www.oag.com/blog/may-2025s-airline-tech-innovations","useFeaturedImage":true,"userPerms":[],"views":null,"visibleToAll":null,"widgetContainers":{},"widgetcontainers":{},"widgets":{}},{"ab":false,"abStatus":null,"abTestId":null,"abVariation":false,"abVariationAutomated":false,"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog/transatlantic-air-travel-demand-this-summer-measure-by-asks-or-seats","afterPostBody":null,"aifeatures":null,"allowedSlugConflict":false,"analytics":null,"analyticsPageId":"190031459871","analyticsPageType":"blog-post","approvalStatus":null,"archived":false,"archivedAt":0,"archivedInDashboard":false,"areCommentsAllowed":false,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","author":null,"authorName":null,"authorUsername":null,"blogAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/www.oag.com/Images/OAG_John_Grant.jpg","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1475227847472,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"John Grant","email":"john.grant@oag.com","facebook":"","fullName":"John Grant","gravatarUrl":"https://app.hubspot.com/settings/avatar/b598c5e03482db185cd10238828b7984","hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":4384658544,"label":"John Grant","language":null,"linkedin":"https://uk.linkedin.com/in/john-grant-919a871a","name":"John Grant","portalId":490937,"slug":"john-grant","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"","twitterUsername":"","updated":1645440628109,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":""},"blogAuthorId":4384658544,"blogPostAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/www.oag.com/Images/OAG_John_Grant.jpg","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1475227847472,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"John Grant","email":"john.grant@oag.com","facebook":"","fullName":"John Grant","gravatarUrl":"https://app.hubspot.com/settings/avatar/b598c5e03482db185cd10238828b7984","hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":4384658544,"label":"John Grant","language":null,"linkedin":"https://uk.linkedin.com/in/john-grant-919a871a","name":"John Grant","portalId":490937,"slug":"john-grant","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"","twitterUsername":"","updated":1645440628109,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":""},"blogPostScheduleTaskUid":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailCampaignId":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailRetryCount":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailTaskUid":"DONE","blogPublishToSocialMediaTask":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blueprintTypeId":0,"businessUnitId":null,"campaign":"a9218a11-f76b-4369-804c-6a0a415bb5c3","campaignName":"2025 Q2: Blog Content","campaignUtm":"12413326-2025%20Q2%3A%20Blog%20Content","category":3,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"checkPostLevelAudienceAccessFirst":true,"clonedFrom":null,"composeBody":null,"compositionId":0,"contentAccessRuleIds":[],"contentAccessRuleTypes":[],"contentGroup":2547580647,"contentGroupId":2547580647,"contentTypeCategory":3,"contentTypeCategoryId":3,"contentTypeId":null,"created":1747055048702,"createdByAgent":null,"createdById":47234281,"createdTime":1747055048702,"crmObjectId":null,"css":{},"cssText":"","ctaClicks":null,"ctaViews":null,"currentState":"PUBLISHED","currentlyPublished":true,"deletedAt":0,"deletedBy":null,"deletedByEmail":null,"deletedById":null,"domain":"","dynamicPageDataSourceId":null,"dynamicPageDataSourceType":null,"dynamicPageHubDbTableId":null,"enableDomainStylesheets":null,"enableGoogleAmpOutputOverride":false,"enableLayoutStylesheets":null,"errors":[],"featuredImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Transatlantic%20ASKs%20or.jpg","featuredImageAltText":"Transatlantic Aviation Market Measuring by ASKs or Seats","featuredImageHeight":900,"featuredImageLength":0,"featuredImageWidth":1600,"flexAreas":{},"folderId":null,"footerHtml":null,"freezeDate":1747142100000,"generateJsonLdEnabledOverride":true,"hasContentAccessRules":false,"hasUserChanges":true,"headHtml":null,"header":null,"htmlTitle":"Transatlantic Air Travel Demand This Summer: Measure by ASKs or Seats?","id":190031459871,"includeDefaultCustomCss":null,"isCaptchaRequired":true,"isCrawlableByBots":false,"isDraft":false,"isInstanceLayoutPage":false,"isInstantEmailEnabled":true,"isPublished":true,"isSocialPublishingEnabled":false,"keywords":[],"label":"Transatlantic Air Travel Demand This Summer: Measure by ASKs or Seats?","language":"en-gb","lastEditSessionId":null,"lastEditUpdateId":null,"layoutSections":{},"legacyBlogTabid":null,"legacyId":null,"legacyPostGuid":null,"linkRelCanonicalUrl":"","listTemplate":"generated_layouts/66381677173.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","mab":false,"mabExperimentId":null,"mabMaster":false,"mabVariant":false,"meta":{"blog_post_schedule_task_uid":null,"blog_publish_to_social_media_task":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blog_publish_instant_email_task_uid":"DONE","blog_publish_instant_email_campaign_id":null,"blog_publish_instant_email_retry_count":null,"rss_body":"

As most legacy airlines have reported their first-quarter 2025 results, there is some confusion about how any slowdown in the global economy is affecting passenger demand for air travel.

\n

John G

\n

Listening to some airlines, the US domestic market has declined, while international demand remains stable. Some European airlines have noted a softening in the transatlantic market and prices, as we’ve seen in some cases, have fallen. However, bookings from some markets to the USA have increased, as the US dollar has weakened by around 8% against the pound since January, while the Euro has strengthened by 10%. Meanwhile hotels in major US leisure destinations apparently suffering from lower demand, presenting opportunities for deals - although that depends on whether you think a £200 a night hotel room is a bargain or not!

\n

The truth is that no one really has a full handle on what is happening and how the summer will finally shape up, but indications are that with a lower price for oil, a strong outbound US market and a recovery in demand from Europe then the summer will be good - although perhaps not quite as good as last year. However, no one knows for certain and much has been made of how exposed the various airlines are to the ebbs and flows of the transatlantic market, so we’ve taken a few measurements to see where the major carriers stand. Are they exposed or perfectly placed?

\n

Measuring the Transatlantic Market with ASKs

\n

For investors and financial analysts the preferred measurement is Available Seat Kilometres (ASKs) as it provides a readily understood operating metric and can also be compared to factors such as revenue (RASK) and cost (CASK) per kilometre. In the table below we have compared each of the listed airlines’ transatlantic capacity against their total planned summer network capacity.

\n\n

When we purely measure total ASKs in the transatlantic market then the US based carriers with their services to multiple European countries have the largest levels of production. Delta Air Lines and United Airlines produce broadly similar levels of ASKs around the sixty-five billion mark, while American Airlines are back at a mere fifty billion ASKs! Amongst the European carriers British Airways are the largest producer of ASKs followed by Lufthansa whose B747’s provide around one-third of their ASK production.

\n
\n

Measurement By Airline Capacity (Seats)

\n

A simpler measurement and one that perhaps is easier to understand is the number of seats on sale. Compared to ASKs this certainly changes billions into millions!

\n\n
\n

Ultimately, while production is an important measurement and is watched closely by analysts, the reality is that the combination of costs and revenue will determine results across the Atlantic this summer. Inevitably some airlines are more exposed to the market and will spin that as a positive if they deliver a strong set of results, while those less exposed may focus on the benefits of a diverse geographic network. Come November we will have some idea of how well or badly each airline performed and who the real winners and less fortunate are.

\n

EUROPEAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest European Airports - Top European Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

","rss_summary":"

As most legacy airlines have reported their first-quarter 2025 results, there is some confusion about how any slowdown in the global economy is affecting passenger demand for air travel.

","keywords":[],"enable_google_amp_output_override":false,"generate_json_ld_enabled":true,"composition_id":0,"is_crawlable_by_bots":false,"tag_ids":[66382214546],"topic_ids":[66382214546],"post_summary":"

As most legacy airlines have reported their first-quarter 2025 results, there is some confusion about how any slowdown in the global economy is affecting passenger demand for air travel.

","post_body":"

As most legacy airlines have reported their first-quarter 2025 results, there is some confusion about how any slowdown in the global economy is affecting passenger demand for air travel.

\n

John G

\n

Listening to some airlines, the US domestic market has declined, while international demand remains stable. Some European airlines have noted a softening in the transatlantic market and prices, as we’ve seen in some cases, have fallen. However, bookings from some markets to the USA have increased, as the US dollar has weakened by around 8% against the pound since January, while the Euro has strengthened by 10%. Meanwhile hotels in major US leisure destinations apparently suffering from lower demand, presenting opportunities for deals - although that depends on whether you think a £200 a night hotel room is a bargain or not!

\n

The truth is that no one really has a full handle on what is happening and how the summer will finally shape up, but indications are that with a lower price for oil, a strong outbound US market and a recovery in demand from Europe then the summer will be good - although perhaps not quite as good as last year. However, no one knows for certain and much has been made of how exposed the various airlines are to the ebbs and flows of the transatlantic market, so we’ve taken a few measurements to see where the major carriers stand. Are they exposed or perfectly placed?

\n

Measuring the Transatlantic Market with ASKs

\n

For investors and financial analysts the preferred measurement is Available Seat Kilometres (ASKs) as it provides a readily understood operating metric and can also be compared to factors such as revenue (RASK) and cost (CASK) per kilometre. In the table below we have compared each of the listed airlines’ transatlantic capacity against their total planned summer network capacity.

\n\n

When we purely measure total ASKs in the transatlantic market then the US based carriers with their services to multiple European countries have the largest levels of production. Delta Air Lines and United Airlines produce broadly similar levels of ASKs around the sixty-five billion mark, while American Airlines are back at a mere fifty billion ASKs! Amongst the European carriers British Airways are the largest producer of ASKs followed by Lufthansa whose B747’s provide around one-third of their ASK production.

\n
\n

Measurement By Airline Capacity (Seats)

\n

A simpler measurement and one that perhaps is easier to understand is the number of seats on sale. Compared to ASKs this certainly changes billions into millions!

\n\n
\n

Ultimately, while production is an important measurement and is watched closely by analysts, the reality is that the combination of costs and revenue will determine results across the Atlantic this summer. Inevitably some airlines are more exposed to the market and will spin that as a positive if they deliver a strong set of results, while those less exposed may focus on the benefits of a diverse geographic network. Come November we will have some idea of how well or badly each airline performed and who the real winners and less fortunate are.

\n

EUROPEAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest European Airports - Top European Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

","html_title":"Transatlantic Air Travel Demand This Summer: Measure by ASKs or Seats?","public_access_rules":[],"public_access_rules_enabled":false,"use_featured_image":true,"head_html":null,"footer_html":null,"attached_stylesheets":[],"enable_domain_stylesheets":null,"include_default_custom_css":null,"layout_sections":{},"past_mab_experiment_ids":[],"deleted_by":null,"featured_image_alt_text":"Transatlantic Aviation Market Measuring by ASKs or Seats","enable_layout_stylesheets":null,"tweet":null,"tweet_at":null,"campaign_name":"2025 Q2: Blog Content","campaign_utm":"12413326-2025%20Q2%3A%20Blog%20Content","meta_keywords":null,"meta_description":"Assessing transatlantic air travel demand this summer, comparing ASKs versus seats to understand airline market exposure and performance predictions.","tweet_immediately":false,"publish_immediately":true,"security_state":"NONE","scheduled_update_date":0,"placement_guids":[],"property_for_dynamic_page_title":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_slug":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_meta_description":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_featured_image":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_canonical_url":null,"preview_image_src":null,"legacy_blog_tabid":null,"legacy_post_guid":null,"performable_variation_letter":null,"style_override_id":null,"has_user_changes":true,"css":{},"css_text":"","unpublished_at":0,"published_by_id":47234281,"allowed_slug_conflict":false,"ai_features":null,"link_rel_canonical_url":"","page_redirected":false,"page_expiry_enabled":null,"page_expiry_date":null,"page_expiry_redirect_id":null,"page_expiry_redirect_url":null,"deleted_by_id":null,"state_when_deleted":null,"cloned_from":null,"staged_from":null,"personas":[],"compose_body":null,"featured_image":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Transatlantic%20ASKs%20or.jpg","featured_image_width":1600,"featured_image_height":900,"publish_timezone_offset":null,"theme_settings_values":null,"password":null,"header":null,"published_at":1747404473739,"last_edit_session_id":null,"last_edit_update_id":null,"created_by_agent":null},"metaDescription":"Assessing transatlantic air travel demand this summer, comparing ASKs versus seats to understand airline market exposure and performance predictions.","metaKeywords":null,"name":"Transatlantic Air Travel Demand This Summer: Measure by ASKs or Seats?","nextPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Europes%20Most%20Popular%20Flights%20Featured%20Image.jpg","nextPostFeaturedImageAltText":"Europe's Most Popular Flights Summer 25","nextPostName":"Europe’s Most Popular Flight Routes for Summer","nextPostSlug":"blog/europes-most-popular-flight-routes-for-summer","pageExpiryDate":null,"pageExpiryEnabled":null,"pageExpiryRedirectId":null,"pageExpiryRedirectUrl":null,"pageRedirected":false,"pageTitle":"Transatlantic Air Travel Demand This Summer: Measure by ASKs or Seats?","parentBlog":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog","allowComments":false,"ampBodyColor":"#404040","ampBodyFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampBodyFontSize":"18","ampCustomCss":"","ampHeaderBackgroundColor":"#ffffff","ampHeaderColor":"#1e1e1e","ampHeaderFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampHeaderFontSize":"36","ampLinkColor":"#416bb3","ampLogoAlt":"OAG Black 2018","ampLogoHeight":594,"ampLogoSrc":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/OAG%20Black%202018.png","ampLogoWidth":945,"analyticsPageId":2547580647,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","businessUnitId":null,"captchaAfterDays":7,"captchaAlways":false,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"closeCommentsOlder":0,"commentDateFormat":"medium","commentFormGuid":"5fddd154-8ed7-470d-bdc0-b3267efba414","commentMaxThreadDepth":4,"commentModeration":false,"commentNotificationEmails":["katy.ludwell@oag.com","hiten.patel@oag.com"],"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentVerificationText":"Thank you for your comment. It has been received.","cosObjectType":"BLOG","created":1424960760000,"createdDateTime":1424960760000,"dailyNotificationEmailId":"2547580932","dateFormattingLanguage":"en_GB","defaultGroupStyleId":"","defaultNotificationFromName":"","defaultNotificationReplyTo":"","deletedAt":0,"description":"Take a look at the OAG Aviation Blog for the latest airline travel news, thought leadership on topics affecting the industry and aviation infographics.","domain":"","domainWhenPublished":"www.oag.com","emailApiSubscriptionId":700840,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"enableSocialAutoPublishing":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":true,"header":null,"htmlFooter":"","htmlFooterIsShared":true,"htmlHead":"","htmlHeadIsShared":true,"htmlKeywords":[],"htmlTitle":"The OAG Blog","id":2547580647,"ilsSubscriptionListsByType":{"daily":2928,"instant":2925,"monthly":2923,"weekly":2930},"instantNotificationEmailId":"27411260688","itemLayoutId":null,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"itemTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","label":"Blog","language":"en-gb","legacyGuid":null,"legacyModuleId":null,"legacyTabId":null,"listingLayoutId":null,"listingPageId":98966560049,"listingTemplatePath":"generated_layouts/66381677173.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","monthFilterFormat":"MMMM yyyy","monthlyNotificationEmailId":null,"name":"Blog","parentBlogUpdateTaskId":null,"portalId":490937,"postHtmlFooter":"","postHtmlHead":"","postsPerListingPage":1000,"postsPerRssFeed":10,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publicTitle":"The OAG Blog","publishDateFormat":"dd MMMM yyyy","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","rootUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog","rssCustomFeed":null,"rssDescription":null,"rssItemFooter":null,"rssItemHeader":null,"settingsOverrides":{"itemLayoutId":true,"itemTemplatePath":true,"itemTemplateIsShared":true,"listingLayoutId":true,"listingTemplatePath":true,"postsPerListingPage":false,"showSummaryInListing":false,"useFeaturedImageInSummary":false,"htmlHead":false,"postHtmlHead":false,"htmlHeadIsShared":false,"htmlFooter":false,"listingPageHtmlFooter":false,"postHtmlFooter":false,"htmlFooterIsShared":false,"attachedStylesheets":false,"postsPerRssFeed":false,"showSummaryInRss":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummariesInEmails":false,"allowComments":false,"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentModeration":false,"closeCommentsOlder":false,"commentNotificationEmails":false,"commentMaxThreadDepth":false,"commentVerificationText":false,"socialAccountTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"ampLogoSrc":false,"ampLogoHeight":false,"ampLogoWidth":false,"ampLogoAlt":false,"ampHeaderFont":false,"ampHeaderFontSize":false,"ampHeaderColor":false,"ampHeaderBackgroundColor":false,"ampBodyFont":false,"ampBodyFontSize":false,"ampBodyColor":false,"ampLinkColor":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false},"showSocialLinkFacebook":true,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":true,"showSocialLinkTwitter":true,"showSummaryInEmails":true,"showSummaryInListing":true,"showSummaryInRss":true,"siteId":0,"slug":"blog","socialAccountTwitter":"@OAG_Aviation","state":null,"subscriptionContactsProperty":"blog_oag_blog_subscription","subscriptionEmailType":null,"subscriptionFormGuid":"fe2ff6b0-4487-4dcf-8851-cab226ede82d","subscriptionListsByType":{"daily":7,"instant":6,"monthly":5,"weekly":8},"title":null,"translatedFromId":136596164207,"translations":{"en":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/en/blog","id":136596164207,"language":"en","masterId":null,"name":"Blog","publicAccessRules":[{"ids":[],"ilsIds":[],"type":"PUBLIC"}],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"slug":"en/blog"}},"updated":1696334483549,"updatedDateTime":1696334483549,"urlBase":"www.oag.com/blog","urlSegments":{},"useFeaturedImageInSummary":true,"usesDefaultTemplate":false,"weeklyNotificationEmailId":"2547580962"},"password":null,"pastMabExperimentIds":[],"performableGuid":null,"performableVariationLetter":null,"personalizationStrategyId":null,"personalizationVariantStatus":null,"personas":[],"placementGuids":[],"portableKey":null,"portalId":490937,"position":null,"postBody":"

As most legacy airlines have reported their first-quarter 2025 results, there is some confusion about how any slowdown in the global economy is affecting passenger demand for air travel.

\n

John G

\n

Listening to some airlines, the US domestic market has declined, while international demand remains stable. Some European airlines have noted a softening in the transatlantic market and prices, as we’ve seen in some cases, have fallen. However, bookings from some markets to the USA have increased, as the US dollar has weakened by around 8% against the pound since January, while the Euro has strengthened by 10%. Meanwhile hotels in major US leisure destinations apparently suffering from lower demand, presenting opportunities for deals - although that depends on whether you think a £200 a night hotel room is a bargain or not!

\n

The truth is that no one really has a full handle on what is happening and how the summer will finally shape up, but indications are that with a lower price for oil, a strong outbound US market and a recovery in demand from Europe then the summer will be good - although perhaps not quite as good as last year. However, no one knows for certain and much has been made of how exposed the various airlines are to the ebbs and flows of the transatlantic market, so we’ve taken a few measurements to see where the major carriers stand. Are they exposed or perfectly placed?

\n

Measuring the Transatlantic Market with ASKs

\n

For investors and financial analysts the preferred measurement is Available Seat Kilometres (ASKs) as it provides a readily understood operating metric and can also be compared to factors such as revenue (RASK) and cost (CASK) per kilometre. In the table below we have compared each of the listed airlines’ transatlantic capacity against their total planned summer network capacity.

\n\n

When we purely measure total ASKs in the transatlantic market then the US based carriers with their services to multiple European countries have the largest levels of production. Delta Air Lines and United Airlines produce broadly similar levels of ASKs around the sixty-five billion mark, while American Airlines are back at a mere fifty billion ASKs! Amongst the European carriers British Airways are the largest producer of ASKs followed by Lufthansa whose B747’s provide around one-third of their ASK production.

\n
\n

Measurement By Airline Capacity (Seats)

\n

A simpler measurement and one that perhaps is easier to understand is the number of seats on sale. Compared to ASKs this certainly changes billions into millions!

\n\n
\n

Ultimately, while production is an important measurement and is watched closely by analysts, the reality is that the combination of costs and revenue will determine results across the Atlantic this summer. Inevitably some airlines are more exposed to the market and will spin that as a positive if they deliver a strong set of results, while those less exposed may focus on the benefits of a diverse geographic network. Come November we will have some idea of how well or badly each airline performed and who the real winners and less fortunate are.

\n

EUROPEAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest European Airports - Top European Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

","postBodyRss":"

As most legacy airlines have reported their first-quarter 2025 results, there is some confusion about how any slowdown in the global economy is affecting passenger demand for air travel.

\n

John G

\n

Listening to some airlines, the US domestic market has declined, while international demand remains stable. Some European airlines have noted a softening in the transatlantic market and prices, as we’ve seen in some cases, have fallen. However, bookings from some markets to the USA have increased, as the US dollar has weakened by around 8% against the pound since January, while the Euro has strengthened by 10%. Meanwhile hotels in major US leisure destinations apparently suffering from lower demand, presenting opportunities for deals - although that depends on whether you think a £200 a night hotel room is a bargain or not!

\n

The truth is that no one really has a full handle on what is happening and how the summer will finally shape up, but indications are that with a lower price for oil, a strong outbound US market and a recovery in demand from Europe then the summer will be good - although perhaps not quite as good as last year. However, no one knows for certain and much has been made of how exposed the various airlines are to the ebbs and flows of the transatlantic market, so we’ve taken a few measurements to see where the major carriers stand. Are they exposed or perfectly placed?

\n

Measuring the Transatlantic Market with ASKs

\n

For investors and financial analysts the preferred measurement is Available Seat Kilometres (ASKs) as it provides a readily understood operating metric and can also be compared to factors such as revenue (RASK) and cost (CASK) per kilometre. In the table below we have compared each of the listed airlines’ transatlantic capacity against their total planned summer network capacity.

\n\n

When we purely measure total ASKs in the transatlantic market then the US based carriers with their services to multiple European countries have the largest levels of production. Delta Air Lines and United Airlines produce broadly similar levels of ASKs around the sixty-five billion mark, while American Airlines are back at a mere fifty billion ASKs! Amongst the European carriers British Airways are the largest producer of ASKs followed by Lufthansa whose B747’s provide around one-third of their ASK production.

\n
\n

Measurement By Airline Capacity (Seats)

\n

A simpler measurement and one that perhaps is easier to understand is the number of seats on sale. Compared to ASKs this certainly changes billions into millions!

\n\n
\n

Ultimately, while production is an important measurement and is watched closely by analysts, the reality is that the combination of costs and revenue will determine results across the Atlantic this summer. Inevitably some airlines are more exposed to the market and will spin that as a positive if they deliver a strong set of results, while those less exposed may focus on the benefits of a diverse geographic network. Come November we will have some idea of how well or badly each airline performed and who the real winners and less fortunate are.

\n

EUROPEAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest European Airports - Top European Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

","postEmailContent":"

As most legacy airlines have reported their first-quarter 2025 results, there is some confusion about how any slowdown in the global economy is affecting passenger demand for air travel.

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Transatlantic%20ASKs%20or.jpg","postListContent":"

As most legacy airlines have reported their first-quarter 2025 results, there is some confusion about how any slowdown in the global economy is affecting passenger demand for air travel.

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Transatlantic%20ASKs%20or.jpg","postRssContent":"

As most legacy airlines have reported their first-quarter 2025 results, there is some confusion about how any slowdown in the global economy is affecting passenger demand for air travel.

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Transatlantic%20ASKs%20or.jpg","postSummary":"

As most legacy airlines have reported their first-quarter 2025 results, there is some confusion about how any slowdown in the global economy is affecting passenger demand for air travel.

","postSummaryRss":"

As most legacy airlines have reported their first-quarter 2025 results, there is some confusion about how any slowdown in the global economy is affecting passenger demand for air travel.

","postTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"XvnyLEiG","previousPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/May%202025%20radar.jpg","previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","previousPostName":"Three Airline-Tech Innovations Raising the AI Bar in May 2025","previousPostSlug":"blog/may-2025s-airline-tech-innovations","processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1747142100000,"publishDateLocalTime":1747142100000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1747142100000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":"en_GB"},"publishImmediately":true,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1747404473739,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":47234281,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog/transatlantic-air-travel-demand-this-summer-measure-by-asks-or-seats","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

As most legacy airlines have reported their first-quarter 2025 results, there is some confusion about how any slowdown in the global economy is affecting passenger demand for air travel.

\n

John G

\n

Listening to some airlines, the US domestic market has declined, while international demand remains stable. Some European airlines have noted a softening in the transatlantic market and prices, as we’ve seen in some cases, have fallen. However, bookings from some markets to the USA have increased, as the US dollar has weakened by around 8% against the pound since January, while the Euro has strengthened by 10%. Meanwhile hotels in major US leisure destinations apparently suffering from lower demand, presenting opportunities for deals - although that depends on whether you think a £200 a night hotel room is a bargain or not!

\n

The truth is that no one really has a full handle on what is happening and how the summer will finally shape up, but indications are that with a lower price for oil, a strong outbound US market and a recovery in demand from Europe then the summer will be good - although perhaps not quite as good as last year. However, no one knows for certain and much has been made of how exposed the various airlines are to the ebbs and flows of the transatlantic market, so we’ve taken a few measurements to see where the major carriers stand. Are they exposed or perfectly placed?

\n

Measuring the Transatlantic Market with ASKs

\n

For investors and financial analysts the preferred measurement is Available Seat Kilometres (ASKs) as it provides a readily understood operating metric and can also be compared to factors such as revenue (RASK) and cost (CASK) per kilometre. In the table below we have compared each of the listed airlines’ transatlantic capacity against their total planned summer network capacity.

\n\n

When we purely measure total ASKs in the transatlantic market then the US based carriers with their services to multiple European countries have the largest levels of production. Delta Air Lines and United Airlines produce broadly similar levels of ASKs around the sixty-five billion mark, while American Airlines are back at a mere fifty billion ASKs! Amongst the European carriers British Airways are the largest producer of ASKs followed by Lufthansa whose B747’s provide around one-third of their ASK production.

\n
\n

Measurement By Airline Capacity (Seats)

\n

A simpler measurement and one that perhaps is easier to understand is the number of seats on sale. Compared to ASKs this certainly changes billions into millions!

\n\n
\n

Ultimately, while production is an important measurement and is watched closely by analysts, the reality is that the combination of costs and revenue will determine results across the Atlantic this summer. Inevitably some airlines are more exposed to the market and will spin that as a positive if they deliver a strong set of results, while those less exposed may focus on the benefits of a diverse geographic network. Come November we will have some idea of how well or badly each airline performed and who the real winners and less fortunate are.

\n

EUROPEAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest European Airports - Top European Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

","rssSummary":"

As most legacy airlines have reported their first-quarter 2025 results, there is some confusion about how any slowdown in the global economy is affecting passenger demand for air travel.

","rssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Transatlantic%20ASKs%20or.jpg","scheduledUpdateDate":0,"screenshotPreviewTakenAt":1747404475018,"screenshotPreviewUrl":"https://cdn1.hubspot.net/hubshotv3/prod/e/0/67bcdd79-8e7b-4d0b-bef8-c52c28df2bcf.png","sections":{},"securityState":"NONE","siteId":null,"slug":"blog/transatlantic-air-travel-demand-this-summer-measure-by-asks-or-seats","stagedFrom":null,"state":"PUBLISHED","stateWhenDeleted":null,"structuredContentPageType":null,"structuredContentType":null,"styleOverrideId":null,"subcategory":"normal_blog_post","syncedWithBlogRoot":true,"tagIds":[66382214546],"tagList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1644988033691,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":66382214546,"label":"Aviation Market Analysis","language":null,"name":"Aviation Market Analysis","portalId":490937,"slug":"aviation-market-analysis","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1645441799987}],"tagNames":["Aviation Market Analysis"],"teamPerms":[],"templatePath":"","templatePathForRender":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","textToAudioFileId":null,"textToAudioGenerationRequestId":null,"themePath":null,"themeSettingsValues":null,"title":"Transatlantic Air Travel Demand This Summer: Measure by ASKs or Seats?","tmsId":null,"topicIds":[66382214546],"topicList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1644988033691,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":66382214546,"label":"Aviation Market Analysis","language":null,"name":"Aviation Market Analysis","portalId":490937,"slug":"aviation-market-analysis","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1645441799987}],"topicNames":["Aviation Market Analysis"],"topics":[66382214546],"translatedContent":{},"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"tweet":null,"tweetAt":null,"tweetImmediately":false,"unpublishedAt":0,"updated":1747404473742,"updatedById":47234281,"upsizeFeaturedImage":false,"url":"https://www.oag.com/blog/transatlantic-air-travel-demand-this-summer-measure-by-asks-or-seats","useFeaturedImage":true,"userPerms":[],"views":null,"visibleToAll":null,"widgetContainers":{},"widgetcontainers":{},"widgets":{}},{"ab":false,"abStatus":null,"abTestId":null,"abVariation":false,"abVariationAutomated":false,"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog/europes-most-popular-flight-routes-for-summer","afterPostBody":null,"aifeatures":null,"allowedSlugConflict":false,"analytics":null,"analyticsPageId":"189589454764","analyticsPageType":"blog-post","approvalStatus":null,"archived":false,"archivedAt":0,"archivedInDashboard":false,"areCommentsAllowed":false,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","author":null,"authorName":null,"authorUsername":null,"blogAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Blog_Post_Images/blog-logo-2019.png","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1443609427809,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"OAG","email":"","facebook":"https://www.facebook.com/OAGAviation","fullName":"OAG","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":3347574604,"label":"OAG","language":null,"linkedin":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/oag","name":"OAG","portalId":490937,"slug":"oag","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"https://twitter.com/OAG_Aviation","twitterUsername":"@OAG_Aviation","updated":1548849836281,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":"http://www.oag.com"},"blogAuthorId":3347574604,"blogPostAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Blog_Post_Images/blog-logo-2019.png","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1443609427809,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"OAG","email":"","facebook":"https://www.facebook.com/OAGAviation","fullName":"OAG","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":3347574604,"label":"OAG","language":null,"linkedin":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/oag","name":"OAG","portalId":490937,"slug":"oag","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"https://twitter.com/OAG_Aviation","twitterUsername":"@OAG_Aviation","updated":1548849836281,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":"http://www.oag.com"},"blogPostScheduleTaskUid":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailCampaignId":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailRetryCount":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailTaskUid":"DONE","blogPublishToSocialMediaTask":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blueprintTypeId":0,"businessUnitId":null,"campaign":"a9218a11-f76b-4369-804c-6a0a415bb5c3","campaignName":"2025 Q2: Blog Content","campaignUtm":"12413326-2025%20Q2%3A%20Blog%20Content","category":3,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"checkPostLevelAudienceAccessFirst":true,"clonedFrom":null,"composeBody":null,"compositionId":0,"contentAccessRuleIds":[],"contentAccessRuleTypes":[],"contentGroup":2547580647,"contentGroupId":2547580647,"contentTypeCategory":3,"contentTypeCategoryId":3,"contentTypeId":null,"created":1746088203674,"createdByAgent":null,"createdById":47234281,"createdTime":1746088203674,"crmObjectId":null,"css":{},"cssText":"","ctaClicks":null,"ctaViews":null,"currentState":"PUBLISHED","currentlyPublished":true,"deletedAt":0,"deletedBy":null,"deletedByEmail":null,"deletedById":null,"domain":"","dynamicPageDataSourceId":null,"dynamicPageDataSourceType":null,"dynamicPageHubDbTableId":null,"enableDomainStylesheets":null,"enableGoogleAmpOutputOverride":false,"enableLayoutStylesheets":null,"errors":[],"featuredImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Europes%20Most%20Popular%20Flights%20Featured%20Image.jpg","featuredImageAltText":"Europe's Most Popular Flights Summer 25","featuredImageHeight":900,"featuredImageLength":0,"featuredImageWidth":1600,"flexAreas":{},"folderId":null,"footerHtml":null,"freezeDate":1746779400000,"generateJsonLdEnabledOverride":true,"hasContentAccessRules":false,"hasUserChanges":true,"headHtml":null,"header":null,"htmlTitle":"Europe’s Most Popular Flight Routes for Summer","id":189589454764,"includeDefaultCustomCss":null,"isCaptchaRequired":true,"isCrawlableByBots":false,"isDraft":false,"isInstanceLayoutPage":false,"isInstantEmailEnabled":true,"isPublished":true,"isSocialPublishingEnabled":false,"keywords":[],"label":"Europe’s Most Popular Flight Routes for Summer","language":"en-gb","lastEditSessionId":null,"lastEditUpdateId":null,"layoutSections":{},"legacyBlogTabid":null,"legacyId":null,"legacyPostGuid":null,"linkRelCanonicalUrl":"","listTemplate":"generated_layouts/66381677173.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","mab":false,"mabExperimentId":null,"mabMaster":false,"mabVariant":false,"meta":{"html_title":"Europe’s Most Popular Flight Routes for Summer","public_access_rules":[],"public_access_rules_enabled":false,"post_body":"

Where are the hotspots for international European travel this summer? Let’s explore the top ten flight routes in Europe based on seats scheduled for the summer air travel season (March 30th-October 25th 2025).

\n

Europe’s 10 Most Popular Summer Flights

\n

This list details the international flights to, from and within Europe with the most scheduled capacity for summer.

\n
    \n
  1. FCO-MAD Rome Fiumicino Apt - Madrid Adolfo Suarez-Barajas Apt: 1,322,042 seats
  2. \n
  3. LIS-MAD Lisbon - Madrid Adolfo Suarez-Barajas Apt - 1,287,024 seats
  4. \n
  5. CPH-OSL Copenhagen Kastrup Apt - Oslo Gardermoen Airport - 1,266,916 seats
  6. \n
  7. DUS-PMI Duesseldorf International Airport - Palma de Mallorca - 1,258,485 seats
  8. \n
  9. JFK-LHR New York J F Kennedy International Apt - London Heathrow Apt - 1,229,245 seats
  10. \n
  11. DUB-LHR Dublin (IE) - London Heathrow Apt - 1,220,720 seats
  12. \n
  13. AMS-BCN Amsterdam - Barcelona Apt (ES) - 1,211,856 seats
  14. \n
  15. BCN-FCO Barcelona Apt (ES) - Rome Fiumicino Apt - 1,191,798 seats
  16. \n
  17. ECN-SAW Ercan - Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen Apt - 1,185,380 seats
  18. \n
  19. ARN-CPH Stockholm Arlanda Apt - Copenhagen Kastrup Apt - 1,168,296 seats
  20. \n
\n

Europe's Top Flights on a Map

\n

\"Most

\n

Exploring the Busiest Flight Routes in Europe

\n

This summer, the top route in Europe is Rome (FCO)-Madrid (MAD), with 1.32M seats. Madrid features twice in this top ten list, as does Barcelona. A total of five of Europe’s busiest routes start or end in Spain.

\n

Nine of the top ten international routes for summer operate totally within Europe. The only route on the list that goes outside the continent is also the only long-haul flight featured, New York (JFK) – London Heathrow (LHR), in fifth place with 1.23 million seats scheduled.

\n

Though we typically think of the sunnier climes of Rome, Barcelona, Lisbon and Istanbul when we consider European hotspots, two key Scandinavian trunk routes feature in the top ten. Copenhagen (CPH) to Oslo (OSL) has 1.27M seats scheduled, making it the third busiest route, and Stockholm (ARN) – Copenhagen (CPH) makes it onto the list in tenth place with 1.17M.

\n\n

Have AirFares increased on Europe's Busiest Routes?

\n
\n

Airfares have increased on most of Europe's busiest airline routes between summer 2024 and summer 2025. The biggest increase (37%) has been on the Ercan - Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen route. Three routes have seen a price reduction: Copenhagen - Oslo, Rome - Madrid and Dusseldorf - Palma. DUS-PMI is the top ten route with the biggest reduction in airfares, with the average lowest economy fare having decreased by a quarter this summer compared to last.

\n

It’s easy to keep track of the European aviation market with our dedicated data dashboard, which is updated monthly. Click through to discover the continent’s busiest airports, top country markets, biggest airlines and more.

\n

EUROPEAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest European Airports - Top European Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

\n

 

","rss_summary":"

Where are the hotspots for international European travel this summer? Let’s explore the top ten flight routes in Europe based on seats scheduled for the summer air travel season (March 30th-October 25th 2025).

","tag_ids":[103404385452],"topic_ids":[103404385452],"enable_google_amp_output_override":false,"generate_json_ld_enabled":true,"post_summary":"

Where are the hotspots for international European travel this summer? Let’s explore the top ten flight routes in Europe based on seats scheduled for the summer air travel season (March 30th-October 25th 2025).

","blog_post_schedule_task_uid":null,"blog_publish_to_social_media_task":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blog_publish_instant_email_task_uid":"DONE","blog_publish_instant_email_campaign_id":null,"blog_publish_instant_email_retry_count":null,"rss_body":"

Where are the hotspots for international European travel this summer? Let’s explore the top ten flight routes in Europe based on seats scheduled for the summer air travel season (March 30th-October 25th 2025).

\n

Europe’s 10 Most Popular Summer Flights

\n

This list details the international flights to, from and within Europe with the most scheduled capacity for summer.

\n
    \n
  1. FCO-MAD Rome Fiumicino Apt - Madrid Adolfo Suarez-Barajas Apt: 1,322,042 seats
  2. \n
  3. LIS-MAD Lisbon - Madrid Adolfo Suarez-Barajas Apt - 1,287,024 seats
  4. \n
  5. CPH-OSL Copenhagen Kastrup Apt - Oslo Gardermoen Airport - 1,266,916 seats
  6. \n
  7. DUS-PMI Duesseldorf International Airport - Palma de Mallorca - 1,258,485 seats
  8. \n
  9. JFK-LHR New York J F Kennedy International Apt - London Heathrow Apt - 1,229,245 seats
  10. \n
  11. DUB-LHR Dublin (IE) - London Heathrow Apt - 1,220,720 seats
  12. \n
  13. AMS-BCN Amsterdam - Barcelona Apt (ES) - 1,211,856 seats
  14. \n
  15. BCN-FCO Barcelona Apt (ES) - Rome Fiumicino Apt - 1,191,798 seats
  16. \n
  17. ECN-SAW Ercan - Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen Apt - 1,185,380 seats
  18. \n
  19. ARN-CPH Stockholm Arlanda Apt - Copenhagen Kastrup Apt - 1,168,296 seats
  20. \n
\n

Europe's Top Flights on a Map

\n

\"Most

\n

Exploring the Busiest Flight Routes in Europe

\n

This summer, the top route in Europe is Rome (FCO)-Madrid (MAD), with 1.32M seats. Madrid features twice in this top ten list, as does Barcelona. A total of five of Europe’s busiest routes start or end in Spain.

\n

Nine of the top ten international routes for summer operate totally within Europe. The only route on the list that goes outside the continent is also the only long-haul flight featured, New York (JFK) – London Heathrow (LHR), in fifth place with 1.23 million seats scheduled.

\n

Though we typically think of the sunnier climes of Rome, Barcelona, Lisbon and Istanbul when we consider European hotspots, two key Scandinavian trunk routes feature in the top ten. Copenhagen (CPH) to Oslo (OSL) has 1.27M seats scheduled, making it the third busiest route, and Stockholm (ARN) – Copenhagen (CPH) makes it onto the list in tenth place with 1.17M.

\n\n

Have AirFares increased on Europe's Busiest Routes?

\n
\n

Airfares have increased on most of Europe's busiest airline routes between summer 2024 and summer 2025. The biggest increase (37%) has been on the Ercan - Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen route. Three routes have seen a price reduction: Copenhagen - Oslo, Rome - Madrid and Dusseldorf - Palma. DUS-PMI is the top ten route with the biggest reduction in airfares, with the average lowest economy fare having decreased by a quarter this summer compared to last.

\n

It’s easy to keep track of the European aviation market with our dedicated data dashboard, which is updated monthly. Click through to discover the continent’s busiest airports, top country markets, biggest airlines and more.

\n

EUROPEAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest European Airports - Top European Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

\n

 

","keywords":[],"composition_id":0,"is_crawlable_by_bots":false,"use_featured_image":true,"published_at":1746779400886,"head_html":null,"footer_html":null,"attached_stylesheets":[],"enable_domain_stylesheets":null,"include_default_custom_css":null,"layout_sections":{},"past_mab_experiment_ids":[],"deleted_by":null,"featured_image_alt_text":"Europe's Most Popular Flights Summer 25","enable_layout_stylesheets":null,"tweet":null,"tweet_at":null,"campaign_name":"2025 Q2: Blog Content","campaign_utm":"12413326-2025%20Q2%3A%20Blog%20Content","meta_keywords":null,"meta_description":"Discover Europe's top 10 summer flight routes by scheduled seats, including popular destinations like Rome, Madrid, and London. Explore key trends in European air travel for 2025.","tweet_immediately":false,"publish_immediately":false,"security_state":"NONE","scheduled_update_date":0,"placement_guids":[],"property_for_dynamic_page_title":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_slug":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_meta_description":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_featured_image":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_canonical_url":null,"preview_image_src":null,"legacy_blog_tabid":null,"legacy_post_guid":null,"performable_variation_letter":null,"style_override_id":null,"has_user_changes":true,"css":{},"css_text":"","unpublished_at":0,"published_by_id":47234281,"allowed_slug_conflict":false,"ai_features":null,"link_rel_canonical_url":"","page_redirected":false,"page_expiry_enabled":null,"page_expiry_date":null,"page_expiry_redirect_id":null,"page_expiry_redirect_url":null,"deleted_by_id":null,"state_when_deleted":null,"cloned_from":null,"staged_from":null,"personas":[],"compose_body":null,"featured_image":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Europes%20Most%20Popular%20Flights%20Featured%20Image.jpg","featured_image_width":1600,"featured_image_height":900,"publish_timezone_offset":null,"theme_settings_values":null,"password":null,"header":null,"last_edit_session_id":null,"last_edit_update_id":null,"created_by_agent":null},"metaDescription":"Discover Europe's top 10 summer flight routes by scheduled seats, including popular destinations like Rome, Madrid, and London. Explore key trends in European air travel for 2025.","metaKeywords":null,"name":"Europe’s Most Popular Flight Routes for Summer","nextPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/May%202025%20radar.jpg","nextPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","nextPostName":"Three Airline-Tech Innovations Raising the AI Bar in May 2025","nextPostSlug":"blog/may-2025s-airline-tech-innovations","pageExpiryDate":null,"pageExpiryEnabled":null,"pageExpiryRedirectId":null,"pageExpiryRedirectUrl":null,"pageRedirected":false,"pageTitle":"Europe’s Most Popular Flight Routes for Summer","parentBlog":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog","allowComments":false,"ampBodyColor":"#404040","ampBodyFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampBodyFontSize":"18","ampCustomCss":"","ampHeaderBackgroundColor":"#ffffff","ampHeaderColor":"#1e1e1e","ampHeaderFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampHeaderFontSize":"36","ampLinkColor":"#416bb3","ampLogoAlt":"OAG Black 2018","ampLogoHeight":594,"ampLogoSrc":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/OAG%20Black%202018.png","ampLogoWidth":945,"analyticsPageId":2547580647,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","businessUnitId":null,"captchaAfterDays":7,"captchaAlways":false,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"closeCommentsOlder":0,"commentDateFormat":"medium","commentFormGuid":"5fddd154-8ed7-470d-bdc0-b3267efba414","commentMaxThreadDepth":4,"commentModeration":false,"commentNotificationEmails":["katy.ludwell@oag.com","hiten.patel@oag.com"],"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentVerificationText":"Thank you for your comment. It has been received.","cosObjectType":"BLOG","created":1424960760000,"createdDateTime":1424960760000,"dailyNotificationEmailId":"2547580932","dateFormattingLanguage":"en_GB","defaultGroupStyleId":"","defaultNotificationFromName":"","defaultNotificationReplyTo":"","deletedAt":0,"description":"Take a look at the OAG Aviation Blog for the latest airline travel news, thought leadership on topics affecting the industry and aviation infographics.","domain":"","domainWhenPublished":"www.oag.com","emailApiSubscriptionId":700840,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"enableSocialAutoPublishing":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":true,"header":null,"htmlFooter":"","htmlFooterIsShared":true,"htmlHead":"","htmlHeadIsShared":true,"htmlKeywords":[],"htmlTitle":"The OAG Blog","id":2547580647,"ilsSubscriptionListsByType":{"daily":2928,"instant":2925,"monthly":2923,"weekly":2930},"instantNotificationEmailId":"27411260688","itemLayoutId":null,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"itemTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","label":"Blog","language":"en-gb","legacyGuid":null,"legacyModuleId":null,"legacyTabId":null,"listingLayoutId":null,"listingPageId":98966560049,"listingTemplatePath":"generated_layouts/66381677173.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","monthFilterFormat":"MMMM yyyy","monthlyNotificationEmailId":null,"name":"Blog","parentBlogUpdateTaskId":null,"portalId":490937,"postHtmlFooter":"","postHtmlHead":"","postsPerListingPage":1000,"postsPerRssFeed":10,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publicTitle":"The OAG Blog","publishDateFormat":"dd MMMM yyyy","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","rootUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog","rssCustomFeed":null,"rssDescription":null,"rssItemFooter":null,"rssItemHeader":null,"settingsOverrides":{"itemLayoutId":true,"itemTemplatePath":true,"itemTemplateIsShared":true,"listingLayoutId":true,"listingTemplatePath":true,"postsPerListingPage":false,"showSummaryInListing":false,"useFeaturedImageInSummary":false,"htmlHead":false,"postHtmlHead":false,"htmlHeadIsShared":false,"htmlFooter":false,"listingPageHtmlFooter":false,"postHtmlFooter":false,"htmlFooterIsShared":false,"attachedStylesheets":false,"postsPerRssFeed":false,"showSummaryInRss":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummariesInEmails":false,"allowComments":false,"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentModeration":false,"closeCommentsOlder":false,"commentNotificationEmails":false,"commentMaxThreadDepth":false,"commentVerificationText":false,"socialAccountTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"ampLogoSrc":false,"ampLogoHeight":false,"ampLogoWidth":false,"ampLogoAlt":false,"ampHeaderFont":false,"ampHeaderFontSize":false,"ampHeaderColor":false,"ampHeaderBackgroundColor":false,"ampBodyFont":false,"ampBodyFontSize":false,"ampBodyColor":false,"ampLinkColor":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false},"showSocialLinkFacebook":true,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":true,"showSocialLinkTwitter":true,"showSummaryInEmails":true,"showSummaryInListing":true,"showSummaryInRss":true,"siteId":0,"slug":"blog","socialAccountTwitter":"@OAG_Aviation","state":null,"subscriptionContactsProperty":"blog_oag_blog_subscription","subscriptionEmailType":null,"subscriptionFormGuid":"fe2ff6b0-4487-4dcf-8851-cab226ede82d","subscriptionListsByType":{"daily":7,"instant":6,"monthly":5,"weekly":8},"title":null,"translatedFromId":136596164207,"translations":{"en":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/en/blog","id":136596164207,"language":"en","masterId":null,"name":"Blog","publicAccessRules":[{"ids":[],"ilsIds":[],"type":"PUBLIC"}],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"slug":"en/blog"}},"updated":1696334483549,"updatedDateTime":1696334483549,"urlBase":"www.oag.com/blog","urlSegments":{},"useFeaturedImageInSummary":true,"usesDefaultTemplate":false,"weeklyNotificationEmailId":"2547580962"},"password":null,"pastMabExperimentIds":[],"performableGuid":null,"performableVariationLetter":null,"personalizationStrategyId":null,"personalizationVariantStatus":null,"personas":[],"placementGuids":[],"portableKey":null,"portalId":490937,"position":null,"postBody":"

Where are the hotspots for international European travel this summer? Let’s explore the top ten flight routes in Europe based on seats scheduled for the summer air travel season (March 30th-October 25th 2025).

\n

Europe’s 10 Most Popular Summer Flights

\n

This list details the international flights to, from and within Europe with the most scheduled capacity for summer.

\n
    \n
  1. FCO-MAD Rome Fiumicino Apt - Madrid Adolfo Suarez-Barajas Apt: 1,322,042 seats
  2. \n
  3. LIS-MAD Lisbon - Madrid Adolfo Suarez-Barajas Apt - 1,287,024 seats
  4. \n
  5. CPH-OSL Copenhagen Kastrup Apt - Oslo Gardermoen Airport - 1,266,916 seats
  6. \n
  7. DUS-PMI Duesseldorf International Airport - Palma de Mallorca - 1,258,485 seats
  8. \n
  9. JFK-LHR New York J F Kennedy International Apt - London Heathrow Apt - 1,229,245 seats
  10. \n
  11. DUB-LHR Dublin (IE) - London Heathrow Apt - 1,220,720 seats
  12. \n
  13. AMS-BCN Amsterdam - Barcelona Apt (ES) - 1,211,856 seats
  14. \n
  15. BCN-FCO Barcelona Apt (ES) - Rome Fiumicino Apt - 1,191,798 seats
  16. \n
  17. ECN-SAW Ercan - Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen Apt - 1,185,380 seats
  18. \n
  19. ARN-CPH Stockholm Arlanda Apt - Copenhagen Kastrup Apt - 1,168,296 seats
  20. \n
\n

Europe's Top Flights on a Map

\n

\"Most

\n

Exploring the Busiest Flight Routes in Europe

\n

This summer, the top route in Europe is Rome (FCO)-Madrid (MAD), with 1.32M seats. Madrid features twice in this top ten list, as does Barcelona. A total of five of Europe’s busiest routes start or end in Spain.

\n

Nine of the top ten international routes for summer operate totally within Europe. The only route on the list that goes outside the continent is also the only long-haul flight featured, New York (JFK) – London Heathrow (LHR), in fifth place with 1.23 million seats scheduled.

\n

Though we typically think of the sunnier climes of Rome, Barcelona, Lisbon and Istanbul when we consider European hotspots, two key Scandinavian trunk routes feature in the top ten. Copenhagen (CPH) to Oslo (OSL) has 1.27M seats scheduled, making it the third busiest route, and Stockholm (ARN) – Copenhagen (CPH) makes it onto the list in tenth place with 1.17M.

\n\n

Have AirFares increased on Europe's Busiest Routes?

\n
\n

Airfares have increased on most of Europe's busiest airline routes between summer 2024 and summer 2025. The biggest increase (37%) has been on the Ercan - Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen route. Three routes have seen a price reduction: Copenhagen - Oslo, Rome - Madrid and Dusseldorf - Palma. DUS-PMI is the top ten route with the biggest reduction in airfares, with the average lowest economy fare having decreased by a quarter this summer compared to last.

\n

It’s easy to keep track of the European aviation market with our dedicated data dashboard, which is updated monthly. Click through to discover the continent’s busiest airports, top country markets, biggest airlines and more.

\n

EUROPEAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest European Airports - Top European Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

\n

 

","postBodyRss":"

Where are the hotspots for international European travel this summer? Let’s explore the top ten flight routes in Europe based on seats scheduled for the summer air travel season (March 30th-October 25th 2025).

\n

Europe’s 10 Most Popular Summer Flights

\n

This list details the international flights to, from and within Europe with the most scheduled capacity for summer.

\n
    \n
  1. FCO-MAD Rome Fiumicino Apt - Madrid Adolfo Suarez-Barajas Apt: 1,322,042 seats
  2. \n
  3. LIS-MAD Lisbon - Madrid Adolfo Suarez-Barajas Apt - 1,287,024 seats
  4. \n
  5. CPH-OSL Copenhagen Kastrup Apt - Oslo Gardermoen Airport - 1,266,916 seats
  6. \n
  7. DUS-PMI Duesseldorf International Airport - Palma de Mallorca - 1,258,485 seats
  8. \n
  9. JFK-LHR New York J F Kennedy International Apt - London Heathrow Apt - 1,229,245 seats
  10. \n
  11. DUB-LHR Dublin (IE) - London Heathrow Apt - 1,220,720 seats
  12. \n
  13. AMS-BCN Amsterdam - Barcelona Apt (ES) - 1,211,856 seats
  14. \n
  15. BCN-FCO Barcelona Apt (ES) - Rome Fiumicino Apt - 1,191,798 seats
  16. \n
  17. ECN-SAW Ercan - Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen Apt - 1,185,380 seats
  18. \n
  19. ARN-CPH Stockholm Arlanda Apt - Copenhagen Kastrup Apt - 1,168,296 seats
  20. \n
\n

Europe's Top Flights on a Map

\n

\"Most

\n

Exploring the Busiest Flight Routes in Europe

\n

This summer, the top route in Europe is Rome (FCO)-Madrid (MAD), with 1.32M seats. Madrid features twice in this top ten list, as does Barcelona. A total of five of Europe’s busiest routes start or end in Spain.

\n

Nine of the top ten international routes for summer operate totally within Europe. The only route on the list that goes outside the continent is also the only long-haul flight featured, New York (JFK) – London Heathrow (LHR), in fifth place with 1.23 million seats scheduled.

\n

Though we typically think of the sunnier climes of Rome, Barcelona, Lisbon and Istanbul when we consider European hotspots, two key Scandinavian trunk routes feature in the top ten. Copenhagen (CPH) to Oslo (OSL) has 1.27M seats scheduled, making it the third busiest route, and Stockholm (ARN) – Copenhagen (CPH) makes it onto the list in tenth place with 1.17M.

\n\n

Have AirFares increased on Europe's Busiest Routes?

\n
\n

Airfares have increased on most of Europe's busiest airline routes between summer 2024 and summer 2025. The biggest increase (37%) has been on the Ercan - Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen route. Three routes have seen a price reduction: Copenhagen - Oslo, Rome - Madrid and Dusseldorf - Palma. DUS-PMI is the top ten route with the biggest reduction in airfares, with the average lowest economy fare having decreased by a quarter this summer compared to last.

\n

It’s easy to keep track of the European aviation market with our dedicated data dashboard, which is updated monthly. Click through to discover the continent’s busiest airports, top country markets, biggest airlines and more.

\n

EUROPEAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest European Airports - Top European Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

\n

 

","postEmailContent":"

Where are the hotspots for international European travel this summer? Let’s explore the top ten flight routes in Europe based on seats scheduled for the summer air travel season (March 30th-October 25th 2025).

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Europes%20Most%20Popular%20Flights%20Featured%20Image.jpg","postListContent":"

Where are the hotspots for international European travel this summer? Let’s explore the top ten flight routes in Europe based on seats scheduled for the summer air travel season (March 30th-October 25th 2025).

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Europes%20Most%20Popular%20Flights%20Featured%20Image.jpg","postRssContent":"

Where are the hotspots for international European travel this summer? Let’s explore the top ten flight routes in Europe based on seats scheduled for the summer air travel season (March 30th-October 25th 2025).

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Europes%20Most%20Popular%20Flights%20Featured%20Image.jpg","postSummary":"

Where are the hotspots for international European travel this summer? Let’s explore the top ten flight routes in Europe based on seats scheduled for the summer air travel season (March 30th-October 25th 2025).

","postSummaryRss":"

Where are the hotspots for international European travel this summer? Let’s explore the top ten flight routes in Europe based on seats scheduled for the summer air travel season (March 30th-October 25th 2025).

","postTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"UkFywqaf","previousPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Transatlantic%20ASKs%20or.jpg","previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":"Transatlantic Aviation Market Measuring by ASKs or Seats","previousPostName":"Transatlantic Air Travel Demand This Summer: Measure by ASKs or Seats?","previousPostSlug":"blog/transatlantic-air-travel-demand-this-summer-measure-by-asks-or-seats","processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1746779400000,"publishDateLocalTime":1746779400000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1746779400000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":"en_GB"},"publishImmediately":false,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1746779400886,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":47234281,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog/europes-most-popular-flight-routes-for-summer","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

Where are the hotspots for international European travel this summer? Let’s explore the top ten flight routes in Europe based on seats scheduled for the summer air travel season (March 30th-October 25th 2025).

\n

Europe’s 10 Most Popular Summer Flights

\n

This list details the international flights to, from and within Europe with the most scheduled capacity for summer.

\n
    \n
  1. FCO-MAD Rome Fiumicino Apt - Madrid Adolfo Suarez-Barajas Apt: 1,322,042 seats
  2. \n
  3. LIS-MAD Lisbon - Madrid Adolfo Suarez-Barajas Apt - 1,287,024 seats
  4. \n
  5. CPH-OSL Copenhagen Kastrup Apt - Oslo Gardermoen Airport - 1,266,916 seats
  6. \n
  7. DUS-PMI Duesseldorf International Airport - Palma de Mallorca - 1,258,485 seats
  8. \n
  9. JFK-LHR New York J F Kennedy International Apt - London Heathrow Apt - 1,229,245 seats
  10. \n
  11. DUB-LHR Dublin (IE) - London Heathrow Apt - 1,220,720 seats
  12. \n
  13. AMS-BCN Amsterdam - Barcelona Apt (ES) - 1,211,856 seats
  14. \n
  15. BCN-FCO Barcelona Apt (ES) - Rome Fiumicino Apt - 1,191,798 seats
  16. \n
  17. ECN-SAW Ercan - Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen Apt - 1,185,380 seats
  18. \n
  19. ARN-CPH Stockholm Arlanda Apt - Copenhagen Kastrup Apt - 1,168,296 seats
  20. \n
\n

Europe's Top Flights on a Map

\n

\"Most

\n

Exploring the Busiest Flight Routes in Europe

\n

This summer, the top route in Europe is Rome (FCO)-Madrid (MAD), with 1.32M seats. Madrid features twice in this top ten list, as does Barcelona. A total of five of Europe’s busiest routes start or end in Spain.

\n

Nine of the top ten international routes for summer operate totally within Europe. The only route on the list that goes outside the continent is also the only long-haul flight featured, New York (JFK) – London Heathrow (LHR), in fifth place with 1.23 million seats scheduled.

\n

Though we typically think of the sunnier climes of Rome, Barcelona, Lisbon and Istanbul when we consider European hotspots, two key Scandinavian trunk routes feature in the top ten. Copenhagen (CPH) to Oslo (OSL) has 1.27M seats scheduled, making it the third busiest route, and Stockholm (ARN) – Copenhagen (CPH) makes it onto the list in tenth place with 1.17M.

\n\n

Have AirFares increased on Europe's Busiest Routes?

\n
\n

Airfares have increased on most of Europe's busiest airline routes between summer 2024 and summer 2025. The biggest increase (37%) has been on the Ercan - Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen route. Three routes have seen a price reduction: Copenhagen - Oslo, Rome - Madrid and Dusseldorf - Palma. DUS-PMI is the top ten route with the biggest reduction in airfares, with the average lowest economy fare having decreased by a quarter this summer compared to last.

\n

It’s easy to keep track of the European aviation market with our dedicated data dashboard, which is updated monthly. Click through to discover the continent’s busiest airports, top country markets, biggest airlines and more.

\n

EUROPEAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest European Airports - Top European Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

\n

 

","rssSummary":"

Where are the hotspots for international European travel this summer? Let’s explore the top ten flight routes in Europe based on seats scheduled for the summer air travel season (March 30th-October 25th 2025).

","rssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Europes%20Most%20Popular%20Flights%20Featured%20Image.jpg","scheduledUpdateDate":0,"screenshotPreviewTakenAt":1746779402038,"screenshotPreviewUrl":"https://cdn1.hubspot.net/hubshotv3/prod/e/0/a7adf250-6620-48b3-bb09-d4b8c05efbb7.png","sections":{},"securityState":"NONE","siteId":null,"slug":"blog/europes-most-popular-flight-routes-for-summer","stagedFrom":null,"state":"PUBLISHED","stateWhenDeleted":null,"structuredContentPageType":null,"structuredContentType":null,"styleOverrideId":null,"subcategory":"normal_blog_post","syncedWithBlogRoot":true,"tagIds":[103404385452],"tagList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1676989906416,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":103404385452,"label":"Infographics","language":"en-gb","name":"Infographics","portalId":490937,"slug":"infographics","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1676989906416}],"tagNames":["Infographics"],"teamPerms":[],"templatePath":"","templatePathForRender":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","textToAudioFileId":null,"textToAudioGenerationRequestId":null,"themePath":null,"themeSettingsValues":null,"title":"Europe’s Most Popular Flight Routes for Summer","tmsId":null,"topicIds":[103404385452],"topicList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1676989906416,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":103404385452,"label":"Infographics","language":"en-gb","name":"Infographics","portalId":490937,"slug":"infographics","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1676989906416}],"topicNames":["Infographics"],"topics":[103404385452],"translatedContent":{},"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"tweet":null,"tweetAt":null,"tweetImmediately":false,"unpublishedAt":0,"updated":1746779402023,"updatedById":47234281,"upsizeFeaturedImage":false,"url":"https://www.oag.com/blog/europes-most-popular-flight-routes-for-summer","useFeaturedImage":true,"userPerms":[],"views":null,"visibleToAll":null,"widgetContainers":{},"widgetcontainers":{},"widgets":{}},{"ab":false,"abStatus":null,"abTestId":null,"abVariation":false,"abVariationAutomated":false,"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars/africa-aviation-all-to-play-for","afterPostBody":null,"aifeatures":null,"allowedSlugConflict":false,"analytics":null,"analyticsPageId":"189594020495","analyticsPageType":"blog-post","approvalStatus":null,"archived":false,"archivedAt":0,"archivedInDashboard":false,"areCommentsAllowed":true,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","author":null,"authorName":null,"authorUsername":null,"blogAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Blog_Post_Images/blog-logo-2019.png","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1443609427809,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"OAG","email":"","facebook":"https://www.facebook.com/OAGAviation","fullName":"OAG","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":3347574604,"label":"OAG","language":null,"linkedin":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/oag","name":"OAG","portalId":490937,"slug":"oag","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"https://twitter.com/OAG_Aviation","twitterUsername":"@OAG_Aviation","updated":1548849836281,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":"http://www.oag.com"},"blogAuthorId":3347574604,"blogPostAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Blog_Post_Images/blog-logo-2019.png","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1443609427809,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"OAG","email":"","facebook":"https://www.facebook.com/OAGAviation","fullName":"OAG","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":3347574604,"label":"OAG","language":null,"linkedin":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/oag","name":"OAG","portalId":490937,"slug":"oag","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"https://twitter.com/OAG_Aviation","twitterUsername":"@OAG_Aviation","updated":1548849836281,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":"http://www.oag.com"},"blogPostScheduleTaskUid":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailCampaignId":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailRetryCount":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailTaskUid":"DONE","blogPublishToSocialMediaTask":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blueprintTypeId":0,"businessUnitId":null,"campaign":null,"campaignName":null,"campaignUtm":null,"category":3,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"checkPostLevelAudienceAccessFirst":true,"clonedFrom":null,"composeBody":null,"compositionId":0,"contentAccessRuleIds":[],"contentAccessRuleTypes":[],"contentGroup":11930067753,"contentGroupId":11930067753,"contentTypeCategory":3,"contentTypeCategoryId":3,"contentTypeId":null,"created":1746095535931,"createdByAgent":null,"createdById":64413925,"createdTime":1746095535931,"crmObjectId":null,"css":{},"cssText":"","ctaClicks":null,"ctaViews":null,"currentState":"PUBLISHED","currentlyPublished":true,"deletedAt":0,"deletedBy":null,"deletedByEmail":null,"deletedById":null,"domain":"","dynamicPageDataSourceId":null,"dynamicPageDataSourceType":null,"dynamicPageHubDbTableId":null,"enableDomainStylesheets":null,"enableGoogleAmpOutputOverride":false,"enableLayoutStylesheets":null,"errors":[],"featuredImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Africa%20webinar%20featured%20image.jpg","featuredImageAltText":"","featuredImageHeight":900,"featuredImageLength":0,"featuredImageWidth":1600,"flexAreas":{},"folderId":null,"footerHtml":null,"freezeDate":1746106699000,"generateJsonLdEnabledOverride":true,"hasContentAccessRules":false,"hasUserChanges":true,"headHtml":null,"header":null,"htmlTitle":"Africa Aviation: All to Play For | Webinars | OAG","id":189594020495,"includeDefaultCustomCss":null,"isCaptchaRequired":true,"isCrawlableByBots":false,"isDraft":false,"isInstanceLayoutPage":false,"isInstantEmailEnabled":true,"isPublished":true,"isSocialPublishingEnabled":false,"keywords":[],"label":"Africa Aviation: All to Play For","language":"en-gb","lastEditSessionId":null,"lastEditUpdateId":null,"layoutSections":{},"legacyBlogTabid":null,"legacyId":null,"legacyPostGuid":null,"linkRelCanonicalUrl":"","listTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","mab":false,"mabExperimentId":null,"mabMaster":false,"mabVariant":false,"meta":{"html_title":"Africa Aviation: All to Play For | Webinars | OAG","public_access_rules":[],"public_access_rules_enabled":false,"post_body":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Ogaga Udjo, MD of ZA Logics, to take a deep dive into Africa's aviation landscape. 

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n

A Look at Growth Trends

\n

First, the panel discussed global growth trends and Africa's capacity and frequency changes:

\n\n

Ogaga gave his insights on the global outlook:

\n
\n

exploring the Carrier Landscape

\n

Next, the panel discussed the African carrier landscape. There were some interesting points to explore:

\n\n
\n

Which business model dominates in the continent?

\n

Next, the panel discussed business models:

\n\n

Will LCCs ever take off in Africa? Or is a different model needed for success?

\n
\n

Watch the webinar in full here:

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n

AFRICAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest African Airports - Africa's Top Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

\n

 

","rss_summary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Ogaga Udjo, MD of ZA Logics, to take a deep dive into Africa's aviation landscape. 

\n","tag_ids":[67554932020],"topic_ids":[67554932020],"enable_google_amp_output_override":false,"generate_json_ld_enabled":true,"post_summary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Ogaga Udjo, MD of ZA Logics, to take a deep dive into Africa's aviation landscape. 

\n","blog_post_schedule_task_uid":null,"blog_publish_to_social_media_task":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blog_publish_instant_email_task_uid":"DONE","blog_publish_instant_email_campaign_id":null,"blog_publish_instant_email_retry_count":null,"rss_body":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Ogaga Udjo, MD of ZA Logics, to take a deep dive into Africa's aviation landscape. 

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n

A Look at Growth Trends

\n

First, the panel discussed global growth trends and Africa's capacity and frequency changes:

\n\n

Ogaga gave his insights on the global outlook:

\n
\n

exploring the Carrier Landscape

\n

Next, the panel discussed the African carrier landscape. There were some interesting points to explore:

\n\n
\n

Which business model dominates in the continent?

\n

Next, the panel discussed business models:

\n\n

Will LCCs ever take off in Africa? Or is a different model needed for success?

\n
\n

Watch the webinar in full here:

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n

AFRICAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest African Airports - Africa's Top Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

\n

 

","keywords":[],"composition_id":0,"is_crawlable_by_bots":false,"use_featured_image":true,"published_at":1746106699858,"head_html":null,"footer_html":null,"attached_stylesheets":[],"enable_domain_stylesheets":null,"include_default_custom_css":null,"layout_sections":{},"past_mab_experiment_ids":[],"deleted_by":null,"featured_image_alt_text":"","enable_layout_stylesheets":null,"tweet":null,"tweet_at":null,"campaign_name":null,"campaign_utm":null,"meta_keywords":null,"meta_description":"The live panel discuss Africa’s aviation landscape, growth trends, carrier stability, and the potential of low-cost carriers.","tweet_immediately":false,"publish_immediately":true,"security_state":"NONE","scheduled_update_date":0,"placement_guids":[],"property_for_dynamic_page_title":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_slug":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_meta_description":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_featured_image":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_canonical_url":null,"preview_image_src":null,"legacy_blog_tabid":null,"legacy_post_guid":null,"performable_variation_letter":null,"style_override_id":null,"has_user_changes":true,"css":{},"css_text":"","unpublished_at":0,"published_by_id":64413925,"allowed_slug_conflict":false,"ai_features":null,"link_rel_canonical_url":"","page_redirected":false,"page_expiry_enabled":null,"page_expiry_date":null,"page_expiry_redirect_id":null,"page_expiry_redirect_url":null,"deleted_by_id":null,"state_when_deleted":null,"cloned_from":null,"staged_from":null,"personas":[],"compose_body":null,"featured_image":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Africa%20webinar%20featured%20image.jpg","featured_image_width":1600,"featured_image_height":900,"publish_timezone_offset":null,"theme_settings_values":null,"password":null,"header":null,"last_edit_session_id":null,"last_edit_update_id":null,"created_by_agent":null},"metaDescription":"The live panel discuss Africa’s aviation landscape, growth trends, carrier stability, and the potential of low-cost carriers.","metaKeywords":null,"name":"Africa Aviation: All to Play For","nextPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/March%2025%20webinar%20header.jpg","nextPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","nextPostName":"Summer Perspectives: Is US Growth Slowing Down or Speeding Up?","nextPostSlug":"webinars/summer-perspectives-is-us-growth-slowing-down-or-speeding-up","pageExpiryDate":null,"pageExpiryEnabled":null,"pageExpiryRedirectId":null,"pageExpiryRedirectUrl":null,"pageRedirected":false,"pageTitle":"Africa Aviation: All to Play For | Webinars | OAG","parentBlog":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars","allowComments":true,"ampBodyColor":"#404040","ampBodyFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampBodyFontSize":"18","ampCustomCss":"","ampHeaderBackgroundColor":"#ffffff","ampHeaderColor":"#1e1e1e","ampHeaderFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampHeaderFontSize":"36","ampLinkColor":"#416bb3","ampLogoAlt":"","ampLogoHeight":0,"ampLogoSrc":"","ampLogoWidth":0,"analyticsPageId":11930067753,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","businessUnitId":null,"captchaAfterDays":7,"captchaAlways":false,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"closeCommentsOlder":0,"commentDateFormat":"medium","commentFormGuid":"6c76af3e-ad15-49a2-8894-6591e9c8d271","commentMaxThreadDepth":1,"commentModeration":false,"commentNotificationEmails":[],"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentVerificationText":"","cosObjectType":"BLOG","created":1565187932453,"createdDateTime":1565187932453,"dailyNotificationEmailId":null,"dateFormattingLanguage":null,"defaultGroupStyleId":"","defaultNotificationFromName":"","defaultNotificationReplyTo":"","deletedAt":0,"description":"Take a look at OAG's past webinars, from discussions about the changes to the air travel industry with markets such as Travel Technology, to analysis on reports, such as the most punctual airlines and airports in the world.","domain":"","domainWhenPublished":"www.oag.com","emailApiSubscriptionId":7157241,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"enableSocialAutoPublishing":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false,"header":null,"htmlFooter":"","htmlFooterIsShared":true,"htmlHead":"","htmlHeadIsShared":true,"htmlKeywords":[],"htmlTitle":"Webinars","id":11930067753,"ilsSubscriptionListsByType":{"instant":3389},"instantNotificationEmailId":"78547147536","itemLayoutId":null,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"itemTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","label":"Webinars","language":"en-gb","legacyGuid":null,"legacyModuleId":null,"legacyTabId":null,"listingLayoutId":null,"listingPageId":null,"listingTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","monthFilterFormat":"MMMM yyyy","monthlyNotificationEmailId":null,"name":"Webinars","parentBlogUpdateTaskId":null,"portalId":490937,"postHtmlFooter":"","postHtmlHead":"","postsPerListingPage":10000,"postsPerRssFeed":10,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publicTitle":"Webinars","publishDateFormat":"dd MMMM yyyy","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","rootUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars","rssCustomFeed":null,"rssDescription":null,"rssItemFooter":null,"rssItemHeader":null,"settingsOverrides":{"itemLayoutId":false,"itemTemplatePath":false,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"listingLayoutId":false,"listingTemplatePath":false,"postsPerListingPage":false,"showSummaryInListing":false,"useFeaturedImageInSummary":false,"htmlHead":false,"postHtmlHead":false,"htmlHeadIsShared":false,"htmlFooter":false,"listingPageHtmlFooter":false,"postHtmlFooter":false,"htmlFooterIsShared":false,"attachedStylesheets":false,"postsPerRssFeed":false,"showSummaryInRss":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummariesInEmails":false,"allowComments":false,"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentModeration":false,"closeCommentsOlder":false,"commentNotificationEmails":false,"commentMaxThreadDepth":false,"commentVerificationText":false,"socialAccountTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"ampLogoSrc":false,"ampLogoHeight":false,"ampLogoWidth":false,"ampLogoAlt":false,"ampHeaderFont":false,"ampHeaderFontSize":false,"ampHeaderColor":false,"ampHeaderBackgroundColor":false,"ampBodyFont":false,"ampBodyFontSize":false,"ampBodyColor":false,"ampLinkColor":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false},"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummaryInListing":true,"showSummaryInRss":false,"siteId":null,"slug":"webinars","socialAccountTwitter":"","state":null,"subscriptionContactsProperty":"blog_webinars_11930067753_subscription","subscriptionEmailType":null,"subscriptionFormGuid":"87ed530a-3050-4bcd-876c-a7e9d951bfaf","subscriptionListsByType":{"instant":5667},"title":null,"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1699001968517,"updatedDateTime":1699001968517,"urlBase":"www.oag.com/webinars","urlSegments":{"all":"all","archive":"archive","author":"author","page":"page","tag":"tag"},"useFeaturedImageInSummary":true,"usesDefaultTemplate":false,"weeklyNotificationEmailId":null},"password":null,"pastMabExperimentIds":[],"performableGuid":null,"performableVariationLetter":null,"personalizationStrategyId":null,"personalizationVariantStatus":null,"personas":[],"placementGuids":[],"portableKey":null,"portalId":490937,"position":null,"postBody":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Ogaga Udjo, MD of ZA Logics, to take a deep dive into Africa's aviation landscape. 

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n

A Look at Growth Trends

\n

First, the panel discussed global growth trends and Africa's capacity and frequency changes:

\n\n

Ogaga gave his insights on the global outlook:

\n
\n

exploring the Carrier Landscape

\n

Next, the panel discussed the African carrier landscape. There were some interesting points to explore:

\n\n
\n

Which business model dominates in the continent?

\n

Next, the panel discussed business models:

\n\n

Will LCCs ever take off in Africa? Or is a different model needed for success?

\n
\n

Watch the webinar in full here:

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n

AFRICAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest African Airports - Africa's Top Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

\n

 

","postBodyRss":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Ogaga Udjo, MD of ZA Logics, to take a deep dive into Africa's aviation landscape. 

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n

A Look at Growth Trends

\n

First, the panel discussed global growth trends and Africa's capacity and frequency changes:

\n\n

Ogaga gave his insights on the global outlook:

\n
\n

exploring the Carrier Landscape

\n

Next, the panel discussed the African carrier landscape. There were some interesting points to explore:

\n\n
\n

Which business model dominates in the continent?

\n

Next, the panel discussed business models:

\n\n

Will LCCs ever take off in Africa? Or is a different model needed for success?

\n
\n

Watch the webinar in full here:

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n

AFRICAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest African Airports - Africa's Top Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

\n

 

","postEmailContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Ogaga Udjo, MD of ZA Logics, to take a deep dive into Africa's aviation landscape. 

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n

A Look at Growth Trends

\n

First, the panel discussed global growth trends and Africa's capacity and frequency changes:

\n\n

Ogaga gave his insights on the global outlook:

\n
\n

exploring the Carrier Landscape

\n

Next, the panel discussed the African carrier landscape. There were some interesting points to explore:

\n\n
\n

Which business model dominates in the continent?

\n

Next, the panel discussed business models:

\n\n

Will LCCs ever take off in Africa? Or is a different model needed for success?

\n
\n

Watch the webinar in full here:

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n

AFRICAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest African Airports - Africa's Top Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

\n

 

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Africa%20webinar%20featured%20image.jpg","postListContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Ogaga Udjo, MD of ZA Logics, to take a deep dive into Africa's aviation landscape. 

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Africa%20webinar%20featured%20image.jpg","postRssContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Ogaga Udjo, MD of ZA Logics, to take a deep dive into Africa's aviation landscape. 

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n

A Look at Growth Trends

\n

First, the panel discussed global growth trends and Africa's capacity and frequency changes:

\n\n

Ogaga gave his insights on the global outlook:

\n
\n

exploring the Carrier Landscape

\n

Next, the panel discussed the African carrier landscape. There were some interesting points to explore:

\n\n
\n

Which business model dominates in the continent?

\n

Next, the panel discussed business models:

\n\n

Will LCCs ever take off in Africa? Or is a different model needed for success?

\n
\n

Watch the webinar in full here:

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n

AFRICAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest African Airports - Africa's Top Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

\n

 

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"","postSummary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Ogaga Udjo, MD of ZA Logics, to take a deep dive into Africa's aviation landscape. 

\n","postSummaryRss":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Ogaga Udjo, MD of ZA Logics, to take a deep dive into Africa's aviation landscape. 

","postTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"ckptPQjG","previousPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/March%2025%20webinar%20header.jpg","previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","previousPostName":"Summer Perspectives: Is US Growth Slowing Down or Speeding Up?","previousPostSlug":"webinars/summer-perspectives-is-us-growth-slowing-down-or-speeding-up","processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1746106699000,"publishDateLocalTime":1746106699000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1746106699000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":null},"publishImmediately":true,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1746106699858,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":64413925,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars/africa-aviation-all-to-play-for","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Ogaga Udjo, MD of ZA Logics, to take a deep dive into Africa's aviation landscape. 

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n

A Look at Growth Trends

\n

First, the panel discussed global growth trends and Africa's capacity and frequency changes:

\n\n

Ogaga gave his insights on the global outlook:

\n
\n

exploring the Carrier Landscape

\n

Next, the panel discussed the African carrier landscape. There were some interesting points to explore:

\n\n
\n

Which business model dominates in the continent?

\n

Next, the panel discussed business models:

\n\n

Will LCCs ever take off in Africa? Or is a different model needed for success?

\n
\n

Watch the webinar in full here:

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n

AFRICAN AVIATION MARKET UPDATES   New data added monthly including:   - Busiest African Airports - Africa's Top Airlines - Mainline vs LCC Capacity  - & More  

\n

 

","rssSummary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Ogaga Udjo, MD of ZA Logics, to take a deep dive into Africa's aviation landscape. 

\n","rssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Africa%20webinar%20featured%20image.jpg","scheduledUpdateDate":0,"screenshotPreviewTakenAt":1746106700186,"screenshotPreviewUrl":"https://cdn1.hubspot.net/hubshotv3/prod/e/0/95a32333-df2e-414d-ac4a-989732c7b38a.png","sections":{},"securityState":"NONE","siteId":null,"slug":"webinars/africa-aviation-all-to-play-for","stagedFrom":null,"state":"PUBLISHED","stateWhenDeleted":null,"structuredContentPageType":null,"structuredContentType":null,"styleOverrideId":null,"subcategory":"normal_blog_post","syncedWithBlogRoot":true,"tagIds":[67554932020],"tagList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1646238071339,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":67554932020,"label":"Webinars","language":"en-gb","name":"Webinars","portalId":490937,"slug":"webinars","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1646238071339}],"tagNames":["Webinars"],"teamPerms":[],"templatePath":"","templatePathForRender":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","textToAudioFileId":null,"textToAudioGenerationRequestId":null,"themePath":null,"themeSettingsValues":null,"title":"Africa Aviation: All to Play For | Webinars | OAG","tmsId":null,"topicIds":[67554932020],"topicList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1646238071339,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":67554932020,"label":"Webinars","language":"en-gb","name":"Webinars","portalId":490937,"slug":"webinars","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1646238071339}],"topicNames":["Webinars"],"topics":[67554932020],"translatedContent":{},"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"tweet":null,"tweetAt":null,"tweetImmediately":false,"unpublishedAt":0,"updated":1746106700217,"updatedById":64413925,"upsizeFeaturedImage":false,"url":"https://www.oag.com/webinars/africa-aviation-all-to-play-for","useFeaturedImage":true,"userPerms":[],"views":null,"visibleToAll":null,"widgetContainers":{},"widgetcontainers":{},"widgets":{"module_168915588393523":{"body":{"module_id":124130590338,"select_blog":11930067753},"child_css":{},"css":{},"definition_id":null,"id":"module_168915588393523","label":"HD Blog Related Post Module","module_id":124130590338,"name":"module_168915588393523","order":4,"smart_objects":[],"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"}}},{"ab":false,"abStatus":null,"abTestId":null,"abVariation":false,"abVariationAutomated":false,"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars/summer-perspectives-is-us-growth-slowing-down-or-speeding-up","afterPostBody":null,"aifeatures":null,"allowedSlugConflict":false,"analytics":null,"analyticsPageId":"187966421824","analyticsPageType":"blog-post","approvalStatus":null,"archived":false,"archivedAt":0,"archivedInDashboard":false,"areCommentsAllowed":true,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","author":null,"authorName":null,"authorUsername":null,"blogAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Blog_Post_Images/blog-logo-2019.png","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1443609427809,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"OAG","email":"","facebook":"https://www.facebook.com/OAGAviation","fullName":"OAG","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":3347574604,"label":"OAG","language":null,"linkedin":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/oag","name":"OAG","portalId":490937,"slug":"oag","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"https://twitter.com/OAG_Aviation","twitterUsername":"@OAG_Aviation","updated":1548849836281,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":"http://www.oag.com"},"blogAuthorId":3347574604,"blogPostAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Blog_Post_Images/blog-logo-2019.png","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1443609427809,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"OAG","email":"","facebook":"https://www.facebook.com/OAGAviation","fullName":"OAG","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":3347574604,"label":"OAG","language":null,"linkedin":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/oag","name":"OAG","portalId":490937,"slug":"oag","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"https://twitter.com/OAG_Aviation","twitterUsername":"@OAG_Aviation","updated":1548849836281,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":"http://www.oag.com"},"blogPostScheduleTaskUid":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailCampaignId":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailRetryCount":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailTaskUid":"DONE","blogPublishToSocialMediaTask":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blueprintTypeId":0,"businessUnitId":null,"campaign":null,"campaignName":null,"campaignUtm":null,"category":3,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"checkPostLevelAudienceAccessFirst":true,"clonedFrom":null,"composeBody":null,"compositionId":0,"contentAccessRuleIds":[],"contentAccessRuleTypes":[],"contentGroup":11930067753,"contentGroupId":11930067753,"contentTypeCategory":3,"contentTypeCategoryId":3,"contentTypeId":null,"created":1743074661468,"createdByAgent":null,"createdById":64413925,"createdTime":1743074661468,"crmObjectId":null,"css":{},"cssText":"","ctaClicks":null,"ctaViews":null,"currentState":"PUBLISHED","currentlyPublished":true,"deletedAt":0,"deletedBy":null,"deletedByEmail":null,"deletedById":null,"domain":"","dynamicPageDataSourceId":null,"dynamicPageDataSourceType":null,"dynamicPageHubDbTableId":null,"enableDomainStylesheets":null,"enableGoogleAmpOutputOverride":false,"enableLayoutStylesheets":null,"errors":[],"featuredImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/March%2025%20webinar%20header.jpg","featuredImageAltText":"","featuredImageHeight":900,"featuredImageLength":0,"featuredImageWidth":1600,"flexAreas":{},"folderId":null,"footerHtml":null,"freezeDate":1743087135000,"generateJsonLdEnabledOverride":true,"hasContentAccessRules":false,"hasUserChanges":true,"headHtml":null,"header":null,"htmlTitle":"Summer Perspectives: Is US Growth Slowing Down or Speeding Up? | Webinars | OAG","id":187966421824,"includeDefaultCustomCss":null,"isCaptchaRequired":true,"isCrawlableByBots":false,"isDraft":false,"isInstanceLayoutPage":false,"isInstantEmailEnabled":true,"isPublished":true,"isSocialPublishingEnabled":false,"keywords":[],"label":"Summer Perspectives: Is US Growth Slowing Down or Speeding Up?","language":"en-gb","lastEditSessionId":null,"lastEditUpdateId":null,"layoutSections":{},"legacyBlogTabid":null,"legacyId":null,"legacyPostGuid":null,"linkRelCanonicalUrl":"","listTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","mab":false,"mabExperimentId":null,"mabMaster":false,"mabVariant":false,"meta":{"html_title":"Summer Perspectives: Is US Growth Slowing Down or Speeding Up? | Webinars | OAG","public_access_rules":[],"public_access_rules_enabled":false,"post_body":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brett Snyder, President of Cranky Flier, to explore Summer 2025 capacity and frequency trends in the US market. The live panel discussed:

\n\n\n

WHAT'S THE SUMMER FORECAST FOR THE AVIATION INDUSTRY?

\n

The panel began by exploring global growth trends:

\n\n

While discussing the data for the summer season, the panel stressed how this is a constantly evolving time for the industry, and that it's going to ultimately be tricky to predict how the market will behave over the coming months, weeks, and even days:

\n

\n

Despite the uncertainty, at this point in the discussion, John asked, \"Brett, you're very in tune with the market. If you had to give a synopsis of what's happening in the first three months of this year and how the next three months look, what would your perspective be of the current state of the aviation industry?\" (A tricky question to ask when, as Brett puts it, we don't know what's going to happen tomorrow!)

\n
\n

US Domestic and International Capacity

\n

The panel then dived into the data for US domestic and international capacity:

\n\n

Is Domestic Demand Softening?

\n

As the panel discussed the GDP forecast, the conversation turned to factors that may impact demand in the domestic market, including political and economic factors. To what extent will the cost of living and uncertainty in the US political system impact consumer confidence?

\n
\n

TO WATCH THE PANEL DISCUSSION IN FULL, CLICK TO VIEW THE Webinar Here:

\n
\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDES HERE

\n
\n

Register below to stay informed about future webinars:

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","rss_summary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brett Snyder, President of Cranky Flier, to explore Summer 2025 capacity and frequency trends in the US market. The live panel discussed:

\n","tag_ids":[67554932020],"topic_ids":[67554932020],"enable_google_amp_output_override":false,"generate_json_ld_enabled":true,"post_summary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brett Snyder, President of Cranky Flier, to explore Summer 2025 capacity and frequency trends in the US market. The live panel discussed:

\n","blog_post_schedule_task_uid":null,"blog_publish_to_social_media_task":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blog_publish_instant_email_task_uid":"DONE","blog_publish_instant_email_campaign_id":null,"blog_publish_instant_email_retry_count":null,"rss_body":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brett Snyder, President of Cranky Flier, to explore Summer 2025 capacity and frequency trends in the US market. The live panel discussed:

\n\n\n

WHAT'S THE SUMMER FORECAST FOR THE AVIATION INDUSTRY?

\n

The panel began by exploring global growth trends:

\n\n

While discussing the data for the summer season, the panel stressed how this is a constantly evolving time for the industry, and that it's going to ultimately be tricky to predict how the market will behave over the coming months, weeks, and even days:

\n

\n

Despite the uncertainty, at this point in the discussion, John asked, \"Brett, you're very in tune with the market. If you had to give a synopsis of what's happening in the first three months of this year and how the next three months look, what would your perspective be of the current state of the aviation industry?\" (A tricky question to ask when, as Brett puts it, we don't know what's going to happen tomorrow!)

\n
\n

US Domestic and International Capacity

\n

The panel then dived into the data for US domestic and international capacity:

\n\n

Is Domestic Demand Softening?

\n

As the panel discussed the GDP forecast, the conversation turned to factors that may impact demand in the domestic market, including political and economic factors. To what extent will the cost of living and uncertainty in the US political system impact consumer confidence?

\n
\n

TO WATCH THE PANEL DISCUSSION IN FULL, CLICK TO VIEW THE Webinar Here:

\n
\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDES HERE

\n
\n

Register below to stay informed about future webinars:

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","keywords":[],"composition_id":0,"is_crawlable_by_bots":false,"use_featured_image":true,"published_at":1743087519649,"head_html":null,"footer_html":null,"attached_stylesheets":[],"enable_domain_stylesheets":null,"include_default_custom_css":null,"layout_sections":{},"past_mab_experiment_ids":[],"deleted_by":null,"featured_image_alt_text":"","enable_layout_stylesheets":null,"tweet":null,"tweet_at":null,"campaign_name":null,"campaign_utm":null,"meta_keywords":null,"meta_description":"The live panel give their insights on US aviation trends for Summer 2025, including domestic and international capacity growth and key market forecasts.","tweet_immediately":false,"publish_immediately":true,"security_state":"NONE","scheduled_update_date":0,"placement_guids":[],"property_for_dynamic_page_title":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_slug":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_meta_description":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_featured_image":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_canonical_url":null,"preview_image_src":null,"legacy_blog_tabid":null,"legacy_post_guid":null,"performable_variation_letter":null,"style_override_id":null,"has_user_changes":true,"css":{},"css_text":"","unpublished_at":0,"published_by_id":64413925,"allowed_slug_conflict":false,"ai_features":null,"link_rel_canonical_url":"","page_redirected":false,"page_expiry_enabled":null,"page_expiry_date":null,"page_expiry_redirect_id":null,"page_expiry_redirect_url":null,"deleted_by_id":null,"state_when_deleted":null,"cloned_from":null,"staged_from":null,"personas":[],"compose_body":null,"featured_image":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/March%2025%20webinar%20header.jpg","featured_image_width":1600,"featured_image_height":900,"publish_timezone_offset":null,"theme_settings_values":null,"password":null,"header":null,"last_edit_session_id":null,"last_edit_update_id":null,"created_by_agent":null},"metaDescription":"The live panel give their insights on US aviation trends for Summer 2025, including domestic and international capacity growth and key market forecasts.","metaKeywords":null,"name":"Summer Perspectives: Is US Growth Slowing Down or Speeding Up?","nextPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Feb%20webinar%203.jpg","nextPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","nextPostName":"A New Era of Enforced Capacity Discipline","nextPostSlug":"webinars/a-new-era-of-enforced-capacity-discipline","pageExpiryDate":null,"pageExpiryEnabled":null,"pageExpiryRedirectId":null,"pageExpiryRedirectUrl":null,"pageRedirected":false,"pageTitle":"Summer Perspectives: Is US Growth Slowing Down or Speeding Up? | Webinars | OAG","parentBlog":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars","allowComments":true,"ampBodyColor":"#404040","ampBodyFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampBodyFontSize":"18","ampCustomCss":"","ampHeaderBackgroundColor":"#ffffff","ampHeaderColor":"#1e1e1e","ampHeaderFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampHeaderFontSize":"36","ampLinkColor":"#416bb3","ampLogoAlt":"","ampLogoHeight":0,"ampLogoSrc":"","ampLogoWidth":0,"analyticsPageId":11930067753,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","businessUnitId":null,"captchaAfterDays":7,"captchaAlways":false,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"closeCommentsOlder":0,"commentDateFormat":"medium","commentFormGuid":"6c76af3e-ad15-49a2-8894-6591e9c8d271","commentMaxThreadDepth":1,"commentModeration":false,"commentNotificationEmails":[],"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentVerificationText":"","cosObjectType":"BLOG","created":1565187932453,"createdDateTime":1565187932453,"dailyNotificationEmailId":null,"dateFormattingLanguage":null,"defaultGroupStyleId":"","defaultNotificationFromName":"","defaultNotificationReplyTo":"","deletedAt":0,"description":"Take a look at OAG's past webinars, from discussions about the changes to the air travel industry with markets such as Travel Technology, to analysis on reports, such as the most punctual airlines and airports in the world.","domain":"","domainWhenPublished":"www.oag.com","emailApiSubscriptionId":7157241,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"enableSocialAutoPublishing":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false,"header":null,"htmlFooter":"","htmlFooterIsShared":true,"htmlHead":"","htmlHeadIsShared":true,"htmlKeywords":[],"htmlTitle":"Webinars","id":11930067753,"ilsSubscriptionListsByType":{"instant":3389},"instantNotificationEmailId":"78547147536","itemLayoutId":null,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"itemTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","label":"Webinars","language":"en-gb","legacyGuid":null,"legacyModuleId":null,"legacyTabId":null,"listingLayoutId":null,"listingPageId":null,"listingTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","monthFilterFormat":"MMMM yyyy","monthlyNotificationEmailId":null,"name":"Webinars","parentBlogUpdateTaskId":null,"portalId":490937,"postHtmlFooter":"","postHtmlHead":"","postsPerListingPage":10000,"postsPerRssFeed":10,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publicTitle":"Webinars","publishDateFormat":"dd MMMM yyyy","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","rootUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars","rssCustomFeed":null,"rssDescription":null,"rssItemFooter":null,"rssItemHeader":null,"settingsOverrides":{"itemLayoutId":false,"itemTemplatePath":false,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"listingLayoutId":false,"listingTemplatePath":false,"postsPerListingPage":false,"showSummaryInListing":false,"useFeaturedImageInSummary":false,"htmlHead":false,"postHtmlHead":false,"htmlHeadIsShared":false,"htmlFooter":false,"listingPageHtmlFooter":false,"postHtmlFooter":false,"htmlFooterIsShared":false,"attachedStylesheets":false,"postsPerRssFeed":false,"showSummaryInRss":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummariesInEmails":false,"allowComments":false,"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentModeration":false,"closeCommentsOlder":false,"commentNotificationEmails":false,"commentMaxThreadDepth":false,"commentVerificationText":false,"socialAccountTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"ampLogoSrc":false,"ampLogoHeight":false,"ampLogoWidth":false,"ampLogoAlt":false,"ampHeaderFont":false,"ampHeaderFontSize":false,"ampHeaderColor":false,"ampHeaderBackgroundColor":false,"ampBodyFont":false,"ampBodyFontSize":false,"ampBodyColor":false,"ampLinkColor":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false},"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummaryInListing":true,"showSummaryInRss":false,"siteId":null,"slug":"webinars","socialAccountTwitter":"","state":null,"subscriptionContactsProperty":"blog_webinars_11930067753_subscription","subscriptionEmailType":null,"subscriptionFormGuid":"87ed530a-3050-4bcd-876c-a7e9d951bfaf","subscriptionListsByType":{"instant":5667},"title":null,"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1699001968517,"updatedDateTime":1699001968517,"urlBase":"www.oag.com/webinars","urlSegments":{"all":"all","archive":"archive","author":"author","page":"page","tag":"tag"},"useFeaturedImageInSummary":true,"usesDefaultTemplate":false,"weeklyNotificationEmailId":null},"password":null,"pastMabExperimentIds":[],"performableGuid":null,"performableVariationLetter":null,"personalizationStrategyId":null,"personalizationVariantStatus":null,"personas":[],"placementGuids":[],"portableKey":null,"portalId":490937,"position":null,"postBody":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brett Snyder, President of Cranky Flier, to explore Summer 2025 capacity and frequency trends in the US market. The live panel discussed:

\n\n\n

WHAT'S THE SUMMER FORECAST FOR THE AVIATION INDUSTRY?

\n

The panel began by exploring global growth trends:

\n\n

While discussing the data for the summer season, the panel stressed how this is a constantly evolving time for the industry, and that it's going to ultimately be tricky to predict how the market will behave over the coming months, weeks, and even days:

\n

\n

Despite the uncertainty, at this point in the discussion, John asked, \"Brett, you're very in tune with the market. If you had to give a synopsis of what's happening in the first three months of this year and how the next three months look, what would your perspective be of the current state of the aviation industry?\" (A tricky question to ask when, as Brett puts it, we don't know what's going to happen tomorrow!)

\n
\n

US Domestic and International Capacity

\n

The panel then dived into the data for US domestic and international capacity:

\n\n

Is Domestic Demand Softening?

\n

As the panel discussed the GDP forecast, the conversation turned to factors that may impact demand in the domestic market, including political and economic factors. To what extent will the cost of living and uncertainty in the US political system impact consumer confidence?

\n
\n

TO WATCH THE PANEL DISCUSSION IN FULL, CLICK TO VIEW THE Webinar Here:

\n
\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDES HERE

\n
\n

Register below to stay informed about future webinars:

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","postBodyRss":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brett Snyder, President of Cranky Flier, to explore Summer 2025 capacity and frequency trends in the US market. The live panel discussed:

\n\n\n

WHAT'S THE SUMMER FORECAST FOR THE AVIATION INDUSTRY?

\n

The panel began by exploring global growth trends:

\n\n

While discussing the data for the summer season, the panel stressed how this is a constantly evolving time for the industry, and that it's going to ultimately be tricky to predict how the market will behave over the coming months, weeks, and even days:

\n

\n

Despite the uncertainty, at this point in the discussion, John asked, \"Brett, you're very in tune with the market. If you had to give a synopsis of what's happening in the first three months of this year and how the next three months look, what would your perspective be of the current state of the aviation industry?\" (A tricky question to ask when, as Brett puts it, we don't know what's going to happen tomorrow!)

\n
\n

US Domestic and International Capacity

\n

The panel then dived into the data for US domestic and international capacity:

\n\n

Is Domestic Demand Softening?

\n

As the panel discussed the GDP forecast, the conversation turned to factors that may impact demand in the domestic market, including political and economic factors. To what extent will the cost of living and uncertainty in the US political system impact consumer confidence?

\n
\n

TO WATCH THE PANEL DISCUSSION IN FULL, CLICK TO VIEW THE Webinar Here:

\n
\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDES HERE

\n
\n

Register below to stay informed about future webinars:

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","postEmailContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brett Snyder, President of Cranky Flier, to explore Summer 2025 capacity and frequency trends in the US market. The live panel discussed:

\n\n\n

WHAT'S THE SUMMER FORECAST FOR THE AVIATION INDUSTRY?

\n

The panel began by exploring global growth trends:

\n\n

While discussing the data for the summer season, the panel stressed how this is a constantly evolving time for the industry, and that it's going to ultimately be tricky to predict how the market will behave over the coming months, weeks, and even days:

\n

\n

Despite the uncertainty, at this point in the discussion, John asked, \"Brett, you're very in tune with the market. If you had to give a synopsis of what's happening in the first three months of this year and how the next three months look, what would your perspective be of the current state of the aviation industry?\" (A tricky question to ask when, as Brett puts it, we don't know what's going to happen tomorrow!)

\n
\n

US Domestic and International Capacity

\n

The panel then dived into the data for US domestic and international capacity:

\n\n

Is Domestic Demand Softening?

\n

As the panel discussed the GDP forecast, the conversation turned to factors that may impact demand in the domestic market, including political and economic factors. To what extent will the cost of living and uncertainty in the US political system impact consumer confidence?

\n
\n

TO WATCH THE PANEL DISCUSSION IN FULL, CLICK TO VIEW THE Webinar Here:

\n
\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDES HERE

\n
\n

Register below to stay informed about future webinars:

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/March%2025%20webinar%20header.jpg","postListContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brett Snyder, President of Cranky Flier, to explore Summer 2025 capacity and frequency trends in the US market. The live panel discussed:

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/March%2025%20webinar%20header.jpg","postRssContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brett Snyder, President of Cranky Flier, to explore Summer 2025 capacity and frequency trends in the US market. The live panel discussed:

\n\n\n

WHAT'S THE SUMMER FORECAST FOR THE AVIATION INDUSTRY?

\n

The panel began by exploring global growth trends:

\n\n

While discussing the data for the summer season, the panel stressed how this is a constantly evolving time for the industry, and that it's going to ultimately be tricky to predict how the market will behave over the coming months, weeks, and even days:

\n

\n

Despite the uncertainty, at this point in the discussion, John asked, \"Brett, you're very in tune with the market. If you had to give a synopsis of what's happening in the first three months of this year and how the next three months look, what would your perspective be of the current state of the aviation industry?\" (A tricky question to ask when, as Brett puts it, we don't know what's going to happen tomorrow!)

\n
\n

US Domestic and International Capacity

\n

The panel then dived into the data for US domestic and international capacity:

\n\n

Is Domestic Demand Softening?

\n

As the panel discussed the GDP forecast, the conversation turned to factors that may impact demand in the domestic market, including political and economic factors. To what extent will the cost of living and uncertainty in the US political system impact consumer confidence?

\n
\n

TO WATCH THE PANEL DISCUSSION IN FULL, CLICK TO VIEW THE Webinar Here:

\n
\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDES HERE

\n
\n

Register below to stay informed about future webinars:

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"","postSummary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brett Snyder, President of Cranky Flier, to explore Summer 2025 capacity and frequency trends in the US market. The live panel discussed:

\n","postSummaryRss":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brett Snyder, President of Cranky Flier, to explore Summer 2025 capacity and frequency trends in the US market. The live panel discussed:

","postTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"rrWcKJrR","previousPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Africa%20webinar%20featured%20image.jpg","previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","previousPostName":"Africa Aviation: All to Play For","previousPostSlug":"webinars/africa-aviation-all-to-play-for","processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1743087135000,"publishDateLocalTime":1743087135000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1743087135000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":null},"publishImmediately":true,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1743087519649,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":64413925,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars/summer-perspectives-is-us-growth-slowing-down-or-speeding-up","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brett Snyder, President of Cranky Flier, to explore Summer 2025 capacity and frequency trends in the US market. The live panel discussed:

\n\n\n

WHAT'S THE SUMMER FORECAST FOR THE AVIATION INDUSTRY?

\n

The panel began by exploring global growth trends:

\n\n

While discussing the data for the summer season, the panel stressed how this is a constantly evolving time for the industry, and that it's going to ultimately be tricky to predict how the market will behave over the coming months, weeks, and even days:

\n

\n

Despite the uncertainty, at this point in the discussion, John asked, \"Brett, you're very in tune with the market. If you had to give a synopsis of what's happening in the first three months of this year and how the next three months look, what would your perspective be of the current state of the aviation industry?\" (A tricky question to ask when, as Brett puts it, we don't know what's going to happen tomorrow!)

\n
\n

US Domestic and International Capacity

\n

The panel then dived into the data for US domestic and international capacity:

\n\n

Is Domestic Demand Softening?

\n

As the panel discussed the GDP forecast, the conversation turned to factors that may impact demand in the domestic market, including political and economic factors. To what extent will the cost of living and uncertainty in the US political system impact consumer confidence?

\n
\n

TO WATCH THE PANEL DISCUSSION IN FULL, CLICK TO VIEW THE Webinar Here:

\n
\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDES HERE

\n
\n

Register below to stay informed about future webinars:

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","rssSummary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brett Snyder, President of Cranky Flier, to explore Summer 2025 capacity and frequency trends in the US market. The live panel discussed:

\n","rssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/March%2025%20webinar%20header.jpg","scheduledUpdateDate":0,"screenshotPreviewTakenAt":1743087521054,"screenshotPreviewUrl":"https://cdn1.hubspot.net/hubshotv3/prod/e/0/f04bc756-8007-4c9b-8340-961b6e848f07.png","sections":{},"securityState":"NONE","siteId":null,"slug":"webinars/summer-perspectives-is-us-growth-slowing-down-or-speeding-up","stagedFrom":null,"state":"PUBLISHED","stateWhenDeleted":null,"structuredContentPageType":null,"structuredContentType":null,"styleOverrideId":null,"subcategory":"normal_blog_post","syncedWithBlogRoot":true,"tagIds":[67554932020],"tagList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1646238071339,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":67554932020,"label":"Webinars","language":"en-gb","name":"Webinars","portalId":490937,"slug":"webinars","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1646238071339}],"tagNames":["Webinars"],"teamPerms":[],"templatePath":"","templatePathForRender":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","textToAudioFileId":null,"textToAudioGenerationRequestId":null,"themePath":null,"themeSettingsValues":null,"title":"Summer Perspectives: Is US Growth Slowing Down or Speeding Up? | Webinars | OAG","tmsId":null,"topicIds":[67554932020],"topicList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1646238071339,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":67554932020,"label":"Webinars","language":"en-gb","name":"Webinars","portalId":490937,"slug":"webinars","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1646238071339}],"topicNames":["Webinars"],"topics":[67554932020],"translatedContent":{},"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"tweet":null,"tweetAt":null,"tweetImmediately":false,"unpublishedAt":0,"updated":1743087521054,"updatedById":64413925,"upsizeFeaturedImage":false,"url":"https://www.oag.com/webinars/summer-perspectives-is-us-growth-slowing-down-or-speeding-up","useFeaturedImage":true,"userPerms":[],"views":null,"visibleToAll":null,"widgetContainers":{},"widgetcontainers":{},"widgets":{}},{"ab":false,"abStatus":null,"abTestId":null,"abVariation":false,"abVariationAutomated":false,"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars/a-new-era-of-enforced-capacity-discipline","afterPostBody":null,"aifeatures":null,"allowedSlugConflict":false,"analytics":null,"analyticsPageId":"185840927908","analyticsPageType":"blog-post","approvalStatus":null,"archived":false,"archivedAt":0,"archivedInDashboard":false,"areCommentsAllowed":true,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","author":null,"authorName":null,"authorUsername":null,"blogAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Blog_Post_Images/blog-logo-2019.png","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1443609427809,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"OAG","email":"","facebook":"https://www.facebook.com/OAGAviation","fullName":"OAG","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":3347574604,"label":"OAG","language":null,"linkedin":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/oag","name":"OAG","portalId":490937,"slug":"oag","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"https://twitter.com/OAG_Aviation","twitterUsername":"@OAG_Aviation","updated":1548849836281,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":"http://www.oag.com"},"blogAuthorId":3347574604,"blogPostAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Blog_Post_Images/blog-logo-2019.png","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1443609427809,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"OAG","email":"","facebook":"https://www.facebook.com/OAGAviation","fullName":"OAG","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":3347574604,"label":"OAG","language":null,"linkedin":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/oag","name":"OAG","portalId":490937,"slug":"oag","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"https://twitter.com/OAG_Aviation","twitterUsername":"@OAG_Aviation","updated":1548849836281,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":"http://www.oag.com"},"blogPostScheduleTaskUid":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailCampaignId":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailRetryCount":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailTaskUid":"DONE","blogPublishToSocialMediaTask":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blueprintTypeId":0,"businessUnitId":null,"campaign":null,"campaignName":null,"campaignUtm":null,"category":3,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"checkPostLevelAudienceAccessFirst":true,"clonedFrom":null,"composeBody":null,"compositionId":0,"contentAccessRuleIds":[],"contentAccessRuleTypes":[],"contentGroup":11930067753,"contentGroupId":11930067753,"contentTypeCategory":3,"contentTypeCategoryId":3,"contentTypeId":null,"created":1738847999392,"createdByAgent":null,"createdById":64413925,"createdTime":1738847999392,"crmObjectId":null,"css":{},"cssText":"","ctaClicks":null,"ctaViews":null,"currentState":"PUBLISHED","currentlyPublished":true,"deletedAt":0,"deletedBy":null,"deletedByEmail":null,"deletedById":null,"domain":"","dynamicPageDataSourceId":null,"dynamicPageDataSourceType":null,"dynamicPageHubDbTableId":null,"enableDomainStylesheets":null,"enableGoogleAmpOutputOverride":false,"enableLayoutStylesheets":null,"errors":[],"featuredImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Feb%20webinar%203.jpg","featuredImageAltText":"","featuredImageHeight":900,"featuredImageLength":0,"featuredImageWidth":1600,"flexAreas":{},"folderId":null,"footerHtml":null,"freezeDate":1738925291000,"generateJsonLdEnabledOverride":true,"hasContentAccessRules":false,"hasUserChanges":true,"headHtml":null,"header":null,"htmlTitle":"A New Era of Enforced Capacity Discipline | Webinars | OAG","id":185840927908,"includeDefaultCustomCss":null,"isCaptchaRequired":true,"isCrawlableByBots":false,"isDraft":false,"isInstanceLayoutPage":false,"isInstantEmailEnabled":true,"isPublished":true,"isSocialPublishingEnabled":false,"keywords":[],"label":"A New Era of Enforced Capacity Discipline","language":"en-gb","lastEditSessionId":null,"lastEditUpdateId":null,"layoutSections":{},"legacyBlogTabid":null,"legacyId":null,"legacyPostGuid":null,"linkRelCanonicalUrl":"","listTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","mab":false,"mabExperimentId":null,"mabMaster":false,"mabVariant":false,"meta":{"html_title":"A New Era of Enforced Capacity Discipline | Webinars | OAG","public_access_rules":[],"public_access_rules_enabled":false,"post_body":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brendan Sobie, Independent Analyst, Consultant and Writer at Sobie Aviation, to discuss an emerging trend in aviation of enforced capacity discipline and how it's impacting growth this year.

\n\n

In the webinar, the live panel take a look at the latest capacity position, how trends in inactive aircraft levels
are emerging, and discuss where the greatest geographical impacts may be. They also explore the low cost sector and how that's evolving.

\n

A LOOK AT GLOBAL TRENDS

\n

First, the panel take a look at the state of global capacity now and the year ahead. When comparing Q1 2025 against the same quarter last year, capacity is up 5. 2 percent - and that's taking into account adjustments due to the leap year last year, which added an extra day in February. It's a good position to be in, John says - but the devil is in the detail:

\n

\"Asia is still very much in a recovery mode. We see that year on year, with another 10 million seats being added back into Northeast Asia, for example. Southeast Asia, another 10 million seats being added compared to last year. So a lot of the capacity growth is happening there. The consequence of that, though, using some of the data that we have, is that the average selling fares are falling quite significantly on those routes, which is good for travellers in Asia. But it is a bit of a warning about being careful about capacity and discipline.\"

\n
\n

Regional Variations in Airline Capacity Growth 

\n

The landscape of airline capacity growth is far from uniform, with distinct regional variations shaping the industry. In 2025, regions such as Asia and Latin America are witnessing significant capacity expansions, driven by recovering markets and increasing demand for air travel, but other regional growth is more cautious.

\n

Looking at the graph, the panel note how one of the most interesting data points is North Africa, where we we've got a 7% increase in capacity and slight reduction in number of frequencies. \"So obviously someone is using larger aircraft and that someone tends to be the low cost airlines, and particularly European low cost airlines, who are actively developing their positions in North Africa particularly at this time of year. Then you compare and contrast with North America, where there's some very real concerns about the longevity of the ultra low cost airline model and where that is going and where it will end up. So, that's that's a lot more of a cautious market.\"

\n
\n

Enforced Capacity Discipline: Causes and ConsequenceS

\n

Enforced capacity discipline is emerging as a significant trend, impacting airline growth strategies globally. This discipline is often a result of factors beyond the airlines' control, such as delays in aircraft deliveries and maintenance issues. Regionally, this has led to varied impacts: while some Asian markets manage oversupply issues, other regions face constraints due to inactive fleets. 

\n
\n

Watch the full webinar here:

\n
\n

 

\n
DOWNLOAD THE SLIDES HERE
\n
 
\n
EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)
","rss_summary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brendan Sobie, Independent Analyst, Consultant and Writer at Sobie Aviation, to discuss an emerging trend in aviation of enforced capacity discipline and how it's impacting growth this year.

\n","tag_ids":[67554932020],"topic_ids":[67554932020],"enable_google_amp_output_override":false,"generate_json_ld_enabled":true,"post_summary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brendan Sobie, Independent Analyst, Consultant and Writer at Sobie Aviation, to discuss an emerging trend in aviation of enforced capacity discipline and how it's impacting growth this year.

\n","blog_post_schedule_task_uid":null,"blog_publish_to_social_media_task":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blog_publish_instant_email_task_uid":"DONE","blog_publish_instant_email_campaign_id":null,"blog_publish_instant_email_retry_count":null,"rss_body":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brendan Sobie, Independent Analyst, Consultant and Writer at Sobie Aviation, to discuss an emerging trend in aviation of enforced capacity discipline and how it's impacting growth this year.

\n\n

In the webinar, the live panel take a look at the latest capacity position, how trends in inactive aircraft levels
are emerging, and discuss where the greatest geographical impacts may be. They also explore the low cost sector and how that's evolving.

\n

A LOOK AT GLOBAL TRENDS

\n

First, the panel take a look at the state of global capacity now and the year ahead. When comparing Q1 2025 against the same quarter last year, capacity is up 5. 2 percent - and that's taking into account adjustments due to the leap year last year, which added an extra day in February. It's a good position to be in, John says - but the devil is in the detail:

\n

\"Asia is still very much in a recovery mode. We see that year on year, with another 10 million seats being added back into Northeast Asia, for example. Southeast Asia, another 10 million seats being added compared to last year. So a lot of the capacity growth is happening there. The consequence of that, though, using some of the data that we have, is that the average selling fares are falling quite significantly on those routes, which is good for travellers in Asia. But it is a bit of a warning about being careful about capacity and discipline.\"

\n
\n

Regional Variations in Airline Capacity Growth 

\n

The landscape of airline capacity growth is far from uniform, with distinct regional variations shaping the industry. In 2025, regions such as Asia and Latin America are witnessing significant capacity expansions, driven by recovering markets and increasing demand for air travel, but other regional growth is more cautious.

\n

Looking at the graph, the panel note how one of the most interesting data points is North Africa, where we we've got a 7% increase in capacity and slight reduction in number of frequencies. \"So obviously someone is using larger aircraft and that someone tends to be the low cost airlines, and particularly European low cost airlines, who are actively developing their positions in North Africa particularly at this time of year. Then you compare and contrast with North America, where there's some very real concerns about the longevity of the ultra low cost airline model and where that is going and where it will end up. So, that's that's a lot more of a cautious market.\"

\n
\n

Enforced Capacity Discipline: Causes and ConsequenceS

\n

Enforced capacity discipline is emerging as a significant trend, impacting airline growth strategies globally. This discipline is often a result of factors beyond the airlines' control, such as delays in aircraft deliveries and maintenance issues. Regionally, this has led to varied impacts: while some Asian markets manage oversupply issues, other regions face constraints due to inactive fleets. 

\n
\n

Watch the full webinar here:

\n
\n

 

\n
DOWNLOAD THE SLIDES HERE
\n
 
\n
EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)
","keywords":[],"composition_id":0,"is_crawlable_by_bots":false,"use_featured_image":true,"published_at":1739205144920,"head_html":null,"footer_html":null,"attached_stylesheets":[],"enable_domain_stylesheets":null,"include_default_custom_css":null,"layout_sections":{},"past_mab_experiment_ids":[],"deleted_by":null,"featured_image_alt_text":"","enable_layout_stylesheets":null,"tweet":null,"tweet_at":null,"campaign_name":null,"campaign_utm":null,"meta_keywords":null,"meta_description":"Explore how enforced capacity discipline is shaping the aviation industry's growth and regional variations in 2025 with insights from our live panel.","tweet_immediately":false,"publish_immediately":true,"security_state":"NONE","scheduled_update_date":0,"placement_guids":[],"property_for_dynamic_page_title":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_slug":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_meta_description":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_featured_image":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_canonical_url":null,"preview_image_src":null,"legacy_blog_tabid":null,"legacy_post_guid":null,"performable_variation_letter":null,"style_override_id":null,"has_user_changes":true,"css":{},"css_text":"","unpublished_at":0,"published_by_id":857021,"allowed_slug_conflict":false,"ai_features":null,"link_rel_canonical_url":"","page_redirected":false,"page_expiry_enabled":null,"page_expiry_date":null,"page_expiry_redirect_id":null,"page_expiry_redirect_url":null,"deleted_by_id":null,"state_when_deleted":null,"cloned_from":null,"staged_from":null,"personas":[],"compose_body":null,"featured_image":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Feb%20webinar%203.jpg","featured_image_width":1600,"featured_image_height":900,"publish_timezone_offset":null,"theme_settings_values":null,"password":null,"header":null,"last_edit_session_id":null,"last_edit_update_id":null,"created_by_agent":null},"metaDescription":"Explore how enforced capacity discipline is shaping the aviation industry's growth and regional variations in 2025 with insights from our live panel.","metaKeywords":null,"name":"A New Era of Enforced Capacity Discipline","nextPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Webinar%20December%204th.jpg","nextPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","nextPostName":"Endings and Beginnings: What Does 2025 Have In Store for the Aviation Industry?","nextPostSlug":"webinars/what-does-2025-have-in-store-for-the-aviation-industry","pageExpiryDate":null,"pageExpiryEnabled":null,"pageExpiryRedirectId":null,"pageExpiryRedirectUrl":null,"pageRedirected":false,"pageTitle":"A New Era of Enforced Capacity Discipline | Webinars | OAG","parentBlog":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars","allowComments":true,"ampBodyColor":"#404040","ampBodyFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampBodyFontSize":"18","ampCustomCss":"","ampHeaderBackgroundColor":"#ffffff","ampHeaderColor":"#1e1e1e","ampHeaderFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampHeaderFontSize":"36","ampLinkColor":"#416bb3","ampLogoAlt":"","ampLogoHeight":0,"ampLogoSrc":"","ampLogoWidth":0,"analyticsPageId":11930067753,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","businessUnitId":null,"captchaAfterDays":7,"captchaAlways":false,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"closeCommentsOlder":0,"commentDateFormat":"medium","commentFormGuid":"6c76af3e-ad15-49a2-8894-6591e9c8d271","commentMaxThreadDepth":1,"commentModeration":false,"commentNotificationEmails":[],"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentVerificationText":"","cosObjectType":"BLOG","created":1565187932453,"createdDateTime":1565187932453,"dailyNotificationEmailId":null,"dateFormattingLanguage":null,"defaultGroupStyleId":"","defaultNotificationFromName":"","defaultNotificationReplyTo":"","deletedAt":0,"description":"Take a look at OAG's past webinars, from discussions about the changes to the air travel industry with markets such as Travel Technology, to analysis on reports, such as the most punctual airlines and airports in the world.","domain":"","domainWhenPublished":"www.oag.com","emailApiSubscriptionId":7157241,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"enableSocialAutoPublishing":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false,"header":null,"htmlFooter":"","htmlFooterIsShared":true,"htmlHead":"","htmlHeadIsShared":true,"htmlKeywords":[],"htmlTitle":"Webinars","id":11930067753,"ilsSubscriptionListsByType":{"instant":3389},"instantNotificationEmailId":"78547147536","itemLayoutId":null,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"itemTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","label":"Webinars","language":"en-gb","legacyGuid":null,"legacyModuleId":null,"legacyTabId":null,"listingLayoutId":null,"listingPageId":null,"listingTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","monthFilterFormat":"MMMM yyyy","monthlyNotificationEmailId":null,"name":"Webinars","parentBlogUpdateTaskId":null,"portalId":490937,"postHtmlFooter":"","postHtmlHead":"","postsPerListingPage":10000,"postsPerRssFeed":10,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publicTitle":"Webinars","publishDateFormat":"dd MMMM yyyy","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","rootUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars","rssCustomFeed":null,"rssDescription":null,"rssItemFooter":null,"rssItemHeader":null,"settingsOverrides":{"itemLayoutId":false,"itemTemplatePath":false,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"listingLayoutId":false,"listingTemplatePath":false,"postsPerListingPage":false,"showSummaryInListing":false,"useFeaturedImageInSummary":false,"htmlHead":false,"postHtmlHead":false,"htmlHeadIsShared":false,"htmlFooter":false,"listingPageHtmlFooter":false,"postHtmlFooter":false,"htmlFooterIsShared":false,"attachedStylesheets":false,"postsPerRssFeed":false,"showSummaryInRss":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummariesInEmails":false,"allowComments":false,"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentModeration":false,"closeCommentsOlder":false,"commentNotificationEmails":false,"commentMaxThreadDepth":false,"commentVerificationText":false,"socialAccountTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"ampLogoSrc":false,"ampLogoHeight":false,"ampLogoWidth":false,"ampLogoAlt":false,"ampHeaderFont":false,"ampHeaderFontSize":false,"ampHeaderColor":false,"ampHeaderBackgroundColor":false,"ampBodyFont":false,"ampBodyFontSize":false,"ampBodyColor":false,"ampLinkColor":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false},"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummaryInListing":true,"showSummaryInRss":false,"siteId":null,"slug":"webinars","socialAccountTwitter":"","state":null,"subscriptionContactsProperty":"blog_webinars_11930067753_subscription","subscriptionEmailType":null,"subscriptionFormGuid":"87ed530a-3050-4bcd-876c-a7e9d951bfaf","subscriptionListsByType":{"instant":5667},"title":null,"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1699001968517,"updatedDateTime":1699001968517,"urlBase":"www.oag.com/webinars","urlSegments":{"all":"all","archive":"archive","author":"author","page":"page","tag":"tag"},"useFeaturedImageInSummary":true,"usesDefaultTemplate":false,"weeklyNotificationEmailId":null},"password":null,"pastMabExperimentIds":[],"performableGuid":null,"performableVariationLetter":null,"personalizationStrategyId":null,"personalizationVariantStatus":null,"personas":[],"placementGuids":[],"portableKey":null,"portalId":490937,"position":null,"postBody":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brendan Sobie, Independent Analyst, Consultant and Writer at Sobie Aviation, to discuss an emerging trend in aviation of enforced capacity discipline and how it's impacting growth this year.

\n\n

In the webinar, the live panel take a look at the latest capacity position, how trends in inactive aircraft levels
are emerging, and discuss where the greatest geographical impacts may be. They also explore the low cost sector and how that's evolving.

\n

A LOOK AT GLOBAL TRENDS

\n

First, the panel take a look at the state of global capacity now and the year ahead. When comparing Q1 2025 against the same quarter last year, capacity is up 5. 2 percent - and that's taking into account adjustments due to the leap year last year, which added an extra day in February. It's a good position to be in, John says - but the devil is in the detail:

\n

\"Asia is still very much in a recovery mode. We see that year on year, with another 10 million seats being added back into Northeast Asia, for example. Southeast Asia, another 10 million seats being added compared to last year. So a lot of the capacity growth is happening there. The consequence of that, though, using some of the data that we have, is that the average selling fares are falling quite significantly on those routes, which is good for travellers in Asia. But it is a bit of a warning about being careful about capacity and discipline.\"

\n
\n

Regional Variations in Airline Capacity Growth 

\n

The landscape of airline capacity growth is far from uniform, with distinct regional variations shaping the industry. In 2025, regions such as Asia and Latin America are witnessing significant capacity expansions, driven by recovering markets and increasing demand for air travel, but other regional growth is more cautious.

\n

Looking at the graph, the panel note how one of the most interesting data points is North Africa, where we we've got a 7% increase in capacity and slight reduction in number of frequencies. \"So obviously someone is using larger aircraft and that someone tends to be the low cost airlines, and particularly European low cost airlines, who are actively developing their positions in North Africa particularly at this time of year. Then you compare and contrast with North America, where there's some very real concerns about the longevity of the ultra low cost airline model and where that is going and where it will end up. So, that's that's a lot more of a cautious market.\"

\n
\n

Enforced Capacity Discipline: Causes and ConsequenceS

\n

Enforced capacity discipline is emerging as a significant trend, impacting airline growth strategies globally. This discipline is often a result of factors beyond the airlines' control, such as delays in aircraft deliveries and maintenance issues. Regionally, this has led to varied impacts: while some Asian markets manage oversupply issues, other regions face constraints due to inactive fleets. 

\n
\n

Watch the full webinar here:

\n
\n

 

\n
DOWNLOAD THE SLIDES HERE
\n
 
\n
EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)
","postBodyRss":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brendan Sobie, Independent Analyst, Consultant and Writer at Sobie Aviation, to discuss an emerging trend in aviation of enforced capacity discipline and how it's impacting growth this year.

\n\n

In the webinar, the live panel take a look at the latest capacity position, how trends in inactive aircraft levels
are emerging, and discuss where the greatest geographical impacts may be. They also explore the low cost sector and how that's evolving.

\n

A LOOK AT GLOBAL TRENDS

\n

First, the panel take a look at the state of global capacity now and the year ahead. When comparing Q1 2025 against the same quarter last year, capacity is up 5. 2 percent - and that's taking into account adjustments due to the leap year last year, which added an extra day in February. It's a good position to be in, John says - but the devil is in the detail:

\n

\"Asia is still very much in a recovery mode. We see that year on year, with another 10 million seats being added back into Northeast Asia, for example. Southeast Asia, another 10 million seats being added compared to last year. So a lot of the capacity growth is happening there. The consequence of that, though, using some of the data that we have, is that the average selling fares are falling quite significantly on those routes, which is good for travellers in Asia. But it is a bit of a warning about being careful about capacity and discipline.\"

\n
\n

Regional Variations in Airline Capacity Growth 

\n

The landscape of airline capacity growth is far from uniform, with distinct regional variations shaping the industry. In 2025, regions such as Asia and Latin America are witnessing significant capacity expansions, driven by recovering markets and increasing demand for air travel, but other regional growth is more cautious.

\n

Looking at the graph, the panel note how one of the most interesting data points is North Africa, where we we've got a 7% increase in capacity and slight reduction in number of frequencies. \"So obviously someone is using larger aircraft and that someone tends to be the low cost airlines, and particularly European low cost airlines, who are actively developing their positions in North Africa particularly at this time of year. Then you compare and contrast with North America, where there's some very real concerns about the longevity of the ultra low cost airline model and where that is going and where it will end up. So, that's that's a lot more of a cautious market.\"

\n
\n

Enforced Capacity Discipline: Causes and ConsequenceS

\n

Enforced capacity discipline is emerging as a significant trend, impacting airline growth strategies globally. This discipline is often a result of factors beyond the airlines' control, such as delays in aircraft deliveries and maintenance issues. Regionally, this has led to varied impacts: while some Asian markets manage oversupply issues, other regions face constraints due to inactive fleets. 

\n
\n

Watch the full webinar here:

\n
\n

 

\n
DOWNLOAD THE SLIDES HERE
\n
 
\n
EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)
","postEmailContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brendan Sobie, Independent Analyst, Consultant and Writer at Sobie Aviation, to discuss an emerging trend in aviation of enforced capacity discipline and how it's impacting growth this year.

\n\n

In the webinar, the live panel take a look at the latest capacity position, how trends in inactive aircraft levels
are emerging, and discuss where the greatest geographical impacts may be. They also explore the low cost sector and how that's evolving.

\n

A LOOK AT GLOBAL TRENDS

\n

First, the panel take a look at the state of global capacity now and the year ahead. When comparing Q1 2025 against the same quarter last year, capacity is up 5. 2 percent - and that's taking into account adjustments due to the leap year last year, which added an extra day in February. It's a good position to be in, John says - but the devil is in the detail:

\n

\"Asia is still very much in a recovery mode. We see that year on year, with another 10 million seats being added back into Northeast Asia, for example. Southeast Asia, another 10 million seats being added compared to last year. So a lot of the capacity growth is happening there. The consequence of that, though, using some of the data that we have, is that the average selling fares are falling quite significantly on those routes, which is good for travellers in Asia. But it is a bit of a warning about being careful about capacity and discipline.\"

\n
\n

Regional Variations in Airline Capacity Growth 

\n

The landscape of airline capacity growth is far from uniform, with distinct regional variations shaping the industry. In 2025, regions such as Asia and Latin America are witnessing significant capacity expansions, driven by recovering markets and increasing demand for air travel, but other regional growth is more cautious.

\n

Looking at the graph, the panel note how one of the most interesting data points is North Africa, where we we've got a 7% increase in capacity and slight reduction in number of frequencies. \"So obviously someone is using larger aircraft and that someone tends to be the low cost airlines, and particularly European low cost airlines, who are actively developing their positions in North Africa particularly at this time of year. Then you compare and contrast with North America, where there's some very real concerns about the longevity of the ultra low cost airline model and where that is going and where it will end up. So, that's that's a lot more of a cautious market.\"

\n
\n

Enforced Capacity Discipline: Causes and ConsequenceS

\n

Enforced capacity discipline is emerging as a significant trend, impacting airline growth strategies globally. This discipline is often a result of factors beyond the airlines' control, such as delays in aircraft deliveries and maintenance issues. Regionally, this has led to varied impacts: while some Asian markets manage oversupply issues, other regions face constraints due to inactive fleets. 

\n
\n

Watch the full webinar here:

\n
\n

 

\n
DOWNLOAD THE SLIDES HERE
\n
 
\n
EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)
","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Feb%20webinar%203.jpg","postListContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brendan Sobie, Independent Analyst, Consultant and Writer at Sobie Aviation, to discuss an emerging trend in aviation of enforced capacity discipline and how it's impacting growth this year.

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Feb%20webinar%203.jpg","postRssContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brendan Sobie, Independent Analyst, Consultant and Writer at Sobie Aviation, to discuss an emerging trend in aviation of enforced capacity discipline and how it's impacting growth this year.

\n\n

In the webinar, the live panel take a look at the latest capacity position, how trends in inactive aircraft levels
are emerging, and discuss where the greatest geographical impacts may be. They also explore the low cost sector and how that's evolving.

\n

A LOOK AT GLOBAL TRENDS

\n

First, the panel take a look at the state of global capacity now and the year ahead. When comparing Q1 2025 against the same quarter last year, capacity is up 5. 2 percent - and that's taking into account adjustments due to the leap year last year, which added an extra day in February. It's a good position to be in, John says - but the devil is in the detail:

\n

\"Asia is still very much in a recovery mode. We see that year on year, with another 10 million seats being added back into Northeast Asia, for example. Southeast Asia, another 10 million seats being added compared to last year. So a lot of the capacity growth is happening there. The consequence of that, though, using some of the data that we have, is that the average selling fares are falling quite significantly on those routes, which is good for travellers in Asia. But it is a bit of a warning about being careful about capacity and discipline.\"

\n
\n

Regional Variations in Airline Capacity Growth 

\n

The landscape of airline capacity growth is far from uniform, with distinct regional variations shaping the industry. In 2025, regions such as Asia and Latin America are witnessing significant capacity expansions, driven by recovering markets and increasing demand for air travel, but other regional growth is more cautious.

\n

Looking at the graph, the panel note how one of the most interesting data points is North Africa, where we we've got a 7% increase in capacity and slight reduction in number of frequencies. \"So obviously someone is using larger aircraft and that someone tends to be the low cost airlines, and particularly European low cost airlines, who are actively developing their positions in North Africa particularly at this time of year. Then you compare and contrast with North America, where there's some very real concerns about the longevity of the ultra low cost airline model and where that is going and where it will end up. So, that's that's a lot more of a cautious market.\"

\n
\n

Enforced Capacity Discipline: Causes and ConsequenceS

\n

Enforced capacity discipline is emerging as a significant trend, impacting airline growth strategies globally. This discipline is often a result of factors beyond the airlines' control, such as delays in aircraft deliveries and maintenance issues. Regionally, this has led to varied impacts: while some Asian markets manage oversupply issues, other regions face constraints due to inactive fleets. 

\n
\n

Watch the full webinar here:

\n
\n

 

\n
DOWNLOAD THE SLIDES HERE
\n
 
\n
EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)
","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"","postSummary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brendan Sobie, Independent Analyst, Consultant and Writer at Sobie Aviation, to discuss an emerging trend in aviation of enforced capacity discipline and how it's impacting growth this year.

\n","postSummaryRss":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brendan Sobie, Independent Analyst, Consultant and Writer at Sobie Aviation, to discuss an emerging trend in aviation of enforced capacity discipline and how it's impacting growth this year.

","postTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"drmSCdoe","previousPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/March%2025%20webinar%20header.jpg","previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","previousPostName":"Summer Perspectives: Is US Growth Slowing Down or Speeding Up?","previousPostSlug":"webinars/summer-perspectives-is-us-growth-slowing-down-or-speeding-up","processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1738925291000,"publishDateLocalTime":1738925291000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1738925291000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":null},"publishImmediately":true,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1739205144920,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":857021,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars/a-new-era-of-enforced-capacity-discipline","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brendan Sobie, Independent Analyst, Consultant and Writer at Sobie Aviation, to discuss an emerging trend in aviation of enforced capacity discipline and how it's impacting growth this year.

\n\n

In the webinar, the live panel take a look at the latest capacity position, how trends in inactive aircraft levels
are emerging, and discuss where the greatest geographical impacts may be. They also explore the low cost sector and how that's evolving.

\n

A LOOK AT GLOBAL TRENDS

\n

First, the panel take a look at the state of global capacity now and the year ahead. When comparing Q1 2025 against the same quarter last year, capacity is up 5. 2 percent - and that's taking into account adjustments due to the leap year last year, which added an extra day in February. It's a good position to be in, John says - but the devil is in the detail:

\n

\"Asia is still very much in a recovery mode. We see that year on year, with another 10 million seats being added back into Northeast Asia, for example. Southeast Asia, another 10 million seats being added compared to last year. So a lot of the capacity growth is happening there. The consequence of that, though, using some of the data that we have, is that the average selling fares are falling quite significantly on those routes, which is good for travellers in Asia. But it is a bit of a warning about being careful about capacity and discipline.\"

\n
\n

Regional Variations in Airline Capacity Growth 

\n

The landscape of airline capacity growth is far from uniform, with distinct regional variations shaping the industry. In 2025, regions such as Asia and Latin America are witnessing significant capacity expansions, driven by recovering markets and increasing demand for air travel, but other regional growth is more cautious.

\n

Looking at the graph, the panel note how one of the most interesting data points is North Africa, where we we've got a 7% increase in capacity and slight reduction in number of frequencies. \"So obviously someone is using larger aircraft and that someone tends to be the low cost airlines, and particularly European low cost airlines, who are actively developing their positions in North Africa particularly at this time of year. Then you compare and contrast with North America, where there's some very real concerns about the longevity of the ultra low cost airline model and where that is going and where it will end up. So, that's that's a lot more of a cautious market.\"

\n
\n

Enforced Capacity Discipline: Causes and ConsequenceS

\n

Enforced capacity discipline is emerging as a significant trend, impacting airline growth strategies globally. This discipline is often a result of factors beyond the airlines' control, such as delays in aircraft deliveries and maintenance issues. Regionally, this has led to varied impacts: while some Asian markets manage oversupply issues, other regions face constraints due to inactive fleets. 

\n
\n

Watch the full webinar here:

\n
\n

 

\n
DOWNLOAD THE SLIDES HERE
\n
 
\n
EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)
","rssSummary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Brendan Sobie, Independent Analyst, Consultant and Writer at Sobie Aviation, to discuss an emerging trend in aviation of enforced capacity discipline and how it's impacting growth this year.

\n","rssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Feb%20webinar%203.jpg","scheduledUpdateDate":0,"screenshotPreviewTakenAt":1746376346416,"screenshotPreviewUrl":"https://cdn1.hubspot.net/hubshotv3/prod/e/0/7dc4477a-98f9-4649-885c-eb762d318a69.png","sections":{},"securityState":"NONE","siteId":null,"slug":"webinars/a-new-era-of-enforced-capacity-discipline","stagedFrom":null,"state":"PUBLISHED","stateWhenDeleted":null,"structuredContentPageType":null,"structuredContentType":null,"styleOverrideId":null,"subcategory":"normal_blog_post","syncedWithBlogRoot":true,"tagIds":[67554932020],"tagList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1646238071339,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":67554932020,"label":"Webinars","language":"en-gb","name":"Webinars","portalId":490937,"slug":"webinars","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1646238071339}],"tagNames":["Webinars"],"teamPerms":[],"templatePath":"","templatePathForRender":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","textToAudioFileId":null,"textToAudioGenerationRequestId":null,"themePath":null,"themeSettingsValues":null,"title":"A New Era of Enforced Capacity Discipline | Webinars | OAG","tmsId":null,"topicIds":[67554932020],"topicList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1646238071339,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":67554932020,"label":"Webinars","language":"en-gb","name":"Webinars","portalId":490937,"slug":"webinars","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1646238071339}],"topicNames":["Webinars"],"topics":[67554932020],"translatedContent":{},"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"tweet":null,"tweetAt":null,"tweetImmediately":false,"unpublishedAt":0,"updated":1739205144924,"updatedById":857021,"upsizeFeaturedImage":false,"url":"https://www.oag.com/webinars/a-new-era-of-enforced-capacity-discipline","useFeaturedImage":true,"userPerms":[],"views":null,"visibleToAll":null,"widgetContainers":{},"widgetcontainers":{},"widgets":{}},{"ab":false,"abStatus":null,"abTestId":null,"abVariation":false,"abVariationAutomated":false,"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars/what-does-2025-have-in-store-for-the-aviation-industry","afterPostBody":null,"aifeatures":null,"allowedSlugConflict":false,"analytics":null,"analyticsPageId":"183544431921","analyticsPageType":"blog-post","approvalStatus":null,"archived":false,"archivedAt":0,"archivedInDashboard":false,"areCommentsAllowed":true,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","author":null,"authorName":null,"authorUsername":null,"blogAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Blog_Post_Images/blog-logo-2019.png","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1443609427809,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"OAG","email":"","facebook":"https://www.facebook.com/OAGAviation","fullName":"OAG","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":3347574604,"label":"OAG","language":null,"linkedin":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/oag","name":"OAG","portalId":490937,"slug":"oag","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"https://twitter.com/OAG_Aviation","twitterUsername":"@OAG_Aviation","updated":1548849836281,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":"http://www.oag.com"},"blogAuthorId":3347574604,"blogPostAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Blog_Post_Images/blog-logo-2019.png","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1443609427809,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"OAG","email":"","facebook":"https://www.facebook.com/OAGAviation","fullName":"OAG","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":3347574604,"label":"OAG","language":null,"linkedin":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/oag","name":"OAG","portalId":490937,"slug":"oag","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"https://twitter.com/OAG_Aviation","twitterUsername":"@OAG_Aviation","updated":1548849836281,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":"http://www.oag.com"},"blogPostScheduleTaskUid":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailCampaignId":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailRetryCount":0,"blogPublishInstantEmailTaskUid":"DONE","blogPublishToSocialMediaTask":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blueprintTypeId":0,"businessUnitId":null,"campaign":"18e4ba5f-f30e-479b-90ef-a9ab8c7c1b94","campaignName":"2024 Q4: Webinar Content","campaignUtm":"2024%20Q4%3A%20Webinar%20Content","category":3,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"checkPostLevelAudienceAccessFirst":true,"clonedFrom":181807327764,"composeBody":null,"compositionId":0,"contentAccessRuleIds":[],"contentAccessRuleTypes":[],"contentGroup":11930067753,"contentGroupId":11930067753,"contentTypeCategory":3,"contentTypeCategoryId":3,"contentTypeId":null,"created":1733400234288,"createdByAgent":null,"createdById":64413925,"createdTime":1733400234288,"crmObjectId":null,"css":{},"cssText":"","ctaClicks":null,"ctaViews":null,"currentState":"PUBLISHED","currentlyPublished":true,"deletedAt":0,"deletedBy":null,"deletedByEmail":null,"deletedById":null,"domain":"","dynamicPageDataSourceId":null,"dynamicPageDataSourceType":null,"dynamicPageHubDbTableId":null,"enableDomainStylesheets":null,"enableGoogleAmpOutputOverride":false,"enableLayoutStylesheets":null,"errors":[],"featuredImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Webinar%20December%204th.jpg","featuredImageAltText":"","featuredImageHeight":900,"featuredImageLength":0,"featuredImageWidth":1600,"flexAreas":{},"folderId":null,"footerHtml":null,"freezeDate":1733418000000,"generateJsonLdEnabledOverride":true,"hasContentAccessRules":false,"hasUserChanges":true,"headHtml":null,"header":null,"htmlTitle":"What Does 2025 Have In Store for the Aviation Industry? | Aviation Webinars","id":183544431921,"includeDefaultCustomCss":null,"isCaptchaRequired":true,"isCrawlableByBots":false,"isDraft":false,"isInstanceLayoutPage":false,"isInstantEmailEnabled":true,"isPublished":true,"isSocialPublishingEnabled":false,"keywords":[],"label":"Endings and Beginnings: What Does 2025 Have In Store for the Aviation Industry?","language":"en-gb","lastEditSessionId":null,"lastEditUpdateId":null,"layoutSections":{},"legacyBlogTabid":null,"legacyId":null,"legacyPostGuid":"","linkRelCanonicalUrl":"","listTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","mab":false,"mabExperimentId":null,"mabMaster":false,"mabVariant":false,"meta":{"html_title":"What Does 2025 Have In Store for the Aviation Industry? | Aviation Webinars","public_access_rules":[],"public_access_rules_enabled":false,"post_body":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Gary Bowerman, Director of Check-In Asia, and Rebecca Francosky, Director Air Service Development at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) to recap 2024's aviation trends and look ahead to what's in store next year for the industry.

\n

From looking back at a turbulent year in the industry to making predictions about what might happen as we move into 2025, the live panel began by taking a look at global capacity growth trends this year.

\n

Capacity Growth Trends in 2024

\n

As the aviation industry continues to rebound from the significant disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, capacity growth has emerged as a crucial indicator of recovery. In 2024, global capacity ended 6.3% ahead of the previous year, showcasing notable resilience. However, the industry is still grappling with the loss of five years of expected growth, a challenge compounded by ongoing supply chain disruptions.

\n
\n

regional changes

\n

The panel then discussed regional changes during the year. While four aviation markets are not yet back to 2019 levels (Southern Africa, South-East Asia, Eastern Europe, and Southwest Pacific) the fastest growing regions include Central Asia, Upper South America, and North Africa, all of which have double digit growth compared to 2019.

\n
\n

Predictions for 2025

\n

As the world began to open from COVID lockdowns, it was reported that air travel would not fully recover until 2025. With 2025 on the horizon, our panel gave their thoughts on what the industry will look like next year. What obstacles lie ahead?

\n
\n

Watch the Full Webinar Below:

\n
\n

DOWNLOAD SLIDES 

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","rss_summary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Gary Bowerman, Director of Check-In Asia, and Rebecca Francosky, Director Air Service Development at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) to recap 2024's aviation trends and look ahead to what's in store next year for the industry.

","tag_ids":[67554932020],"topic_ids":[67554932020],"enable_google_amp_output_override":false,"generate_json_ld_enabled":true,"post_summary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Gary Bowerman, Director of Check-In Asia, and Rebecca Francosky, Director Air Service Development at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) to recap 2024's aviation trends and look ahead to what's in store next year for the industry.

","blog_post_schedule_task_uid":null,"blog_publish_to_social_media_task":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blog_publish_instant_email_task_uid":"DONE","blog_publish_instant_email_campaign_id":null,"blog_publish_instant_email_retry_count":0,"rss_body":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Gary Bowerman, Director of Check-In Asia, and Rebecca Francosky, Director Air Service Development at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) to recap 2024's aviation trends and look ahead to what's in store next year for the industry.

\n

From looking back at a turbulent year in the industry to making predictions about what might happen as we move into 2025, the live panel began by taking a look at global capacity growth trends this year.

\n

Capacity Growth Trends in 2024

\n

As the aviation industry continues to rebound from the significant disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, capacity growth has emerged as a crucial indicator of recovery. In 2024, global capacity ended 6.3% ahead of the previous year, showcasing notable resilience. However, the industry is still grappling with the loss of five years of expected growth, a challenge compounded by ongoing supply chain disruptions.

\n
\n

regional changes

\n

The panel then discussed regional changes during the year. While four aviation markets are not yet back to 2019 levels (Southern Africa, South-East Asia, Eastern Europe, and Southwest Pacific) the fastest growing regions include Central Asia, Upper South America, and North Africa, all of which have double digit growth compared to 2019.

\n
\n

Predictions for 2025

\n

As the world began to open from COVID lockdowns, it was reported that air travel would not fully recover until 2025. With 2025 on the horizon, our panel gave their thoughts on what the industry will look like next year. What obstacles lie ahead?

\n
\n

Watch the Full Webinar Below:

\n
\n

DOWNLOAD SLIDES 

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","keywords":[],"composition_id":0,"is_crawlable_by_bots":false,"use_featured_image":true,"published_at":1733418000645,"head_html":null,"footer_html":null,"attached_stylesheets":[],"enable_domain_stylesheets":null,"include_default_custom_css":null,"layout_sections":{},"past_mab_experiment_ids":[],"deleted_by":null,"featured_image_alt_text":"","enable_layout_stylesheets":null,"tweet":null,"tweet_at":null,"campaign_name":"2024 Q4: Webinar Content","campaign_utm":"2024%20Q4%3A%20Webinar%20Content","meta_keywords":null,"meta_description":"In our final webinar of the year, the live panel look back at aviation trends from 2024 and discuss what might be in store for the industry in 2025.","tweet_immediately":false,"publish_immediately":false,"security_state":"NONE","scheduled_update_date":0,"placement_guids":[],"property_for_dynamic_page_title":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_slug":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_meta_description":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_featured_image":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_canonical_url":null,"preview_image_src":null,"legacy_blog_tabid":null,"legacy_post_guid":"","performable_variation_letter":null,"style_override_id":null,"has_user_changes":true,"css":{},"css_text":"","unpublished_at":0,"published_by_id":64413925,"allowed_slug_conflict":false,"ai_features":null,"link_rel_canonical_url":"","page_redirected":false,"page_expiry_enabled":false,"page_expiry_date":null,"page_expiry_redirect_id":null,"page_expiry_redirect_url":null,"deleted_by_id":null,"state_when_deleted":null,"cloned_from":181807327764,"staged_from":null,"personas":[],"compose_body":null,"featured_image":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Webinar%20December%204th.jpg","featured_image_width":1600,"featured_image_height":900,"publish_timezone_offset":null,"theme_settings_values":null,"password":null,"header":null,"last_edit_session_id":null,"last_edit_update_id":null,"created_by_agent":null},"metaDescription":"In our final webinar of the year, the live panel look back at aviation trends from 2024 and discuss what might be in store for the industry in 2025.","metaKeywords":null,"name":"Endings and Beginnings: What Does 2025 Have In Store for the Aviation Industry?","nextPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Feb%20webinar%203.jpg","nextPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","nextPostName":"A New Era of Enforced Capacity Discipline","nextPostSlug":"webinars/a-new-era-of-enforced-capacity-discipline","pageExpiryDate":null,"pageExpiryEnabled":false,"pageExpiryRedirectId":null,"pageExpiryRedirectUrl":null,"pageRedirected":false,"pageTitle":"What Does 2025 Have In Store for the Aviation Industry? | Aviation Webinars","parentBlog":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars","allowComments":true,"ampBodyColor":"#404040","ampBodyFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampBodyFontSize":"18","ampCustomCss":"","ampHeaderBackgroundColor":"#ffffff","ampHeaderColor":"#1e1e1e","ampHeaderFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampHeaderFontSize":"36","ampLinkColor":"#416bb3","ampLogoAlt":"","ampLogoHeight":0,"ampLogoSrc":"","ampLogoWidth":0,"analyticsPageId":11930067753,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","businessUnitId":null,"captchaAfterDays":7,"captchaAlways":false,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"closeCommentsOlder":0,"commentDateFormat":"medium","commentFormGuid":"6c76af3e-ad15-49a2-8894-6591e9c8d271","commentMaxThreadDepth":1,"commentModeration":false,"commentNotificationEmails":[],"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentVerificationText":"","cosObjectType":"BLOG","created":1565187932453,"createdDateTime":1565187932453,"dailyNotificationEmailId":null,"dateFormattingLanguage":null,"defaultGroupStyleId":"","defaultNotificationFromName":"","defaultNotificationReplyTo":"","deletedAt":0,"description":"Take a look at OAG's past webinars, from discussions about the changes to the air travel industry with markets such as Travel Technology, to analysis on reports, such as the most punctual airlines and airports in the world.","domain":"","domainWhenPublished":"www.oag.com","emailApiSubscriptionId":7157241,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"enableSocialAutoPublishing":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false,"header":null,"htmlFooter":"","htmlFooterIsShared":true,"htmlHead":"","htmlHeadIsShared":true,"htmlKeywords":[],"htmlTitle":"Webinars","id":11930067753,"ilsSubscriptionListsByType":{"instant":3389},"instantNotificationEmailId":"78547147536","itemLayoutId":null,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"itemTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","label":"Webinars","language":"en-gb","legacyGuid":null,"legacyModuleId":null,"legacyTabId":null,"listingLayoutId":null,"listingPageId":null,"listingTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","monthFilterFormat":"MMMM yyyy","monthlyNotificationEmailId":null,"name":"Webinars","parentBlogUpdateTaskId":null,"portalId":490937,"postHtmlFooter":"","postHtmlHead":"","postsPerListingPage":10000,"postsPerRssFeed":10,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publicTitle":"Webinars","publishDateFormat":"dd MMMM yyyy","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","rootUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars","rssCustomFeed":null,"rssDescription":null,"rssItemFooter":null,"rssItemHeader":null,"settingsOverrides":{"itemLayoutId":false,"itemTemplatePath":false,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"listingLayoutId":false,"listingTemplatePath":false,"postsPerListingPage":false,"showSummaryInListing":false,"useFeaturedImageInSummary":false,"htmlHead":false,"postHtmlHead":false,"htmlHeadIsShared":false,"htmlFooter":false,"listingPageHtmlFooter":false,"postHtmlFooter":false,"htmlFooterIsShared":false,"attachedStylesheets":false,"postsPerRssFeed":false,"showSummaryInRss":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummariesInEmails":false,"allowComments":false,"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentModeration":false,"closeCommentsOlder":false,"commentNotificationEmails":false,"commentMaxThreadDepth":false,"commentVerificationText":false,"socialAccountTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"ampLogoSrc":false,"ampLogoHeight":false,"ampLogoWidth":false,"ampLogoAlt":false,"ampHeaderFont":false,"ampHeaderFontSize":false,"ampHeaderColor":false,"ampHeaderBackgroundColor":false,"ampBodyFont":false,"ampBodyFontSize":false,"ampBodyColor":false,"ampLinkColor":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false},"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummaryInListing":true,"showSummaryInRss":false,"siteId":null,"slug":"webinars","socialAccountTwitter":"","state":null,"subscriptionContactsProperty":"blog_webinars_11930067753_subscription","subscriptionEmailType":null,"subscriptionFormGuid":"87ed530a-3050-4bcd-876c-a7e9d951bfaf","subscriptionListsByType":{"instant":5667},"title":null,"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1699001968517,"updatedDateTime":1699001968517,"urlBase":"www.oag.com/webinars","urlSegments":{"all":"all","archive":"archive","author":"author","page":"page","tag":"tag"},"useFeaturedImageInSummary":true,"usesDefaultTemplate":false,"weeklyNotificationEmailId":null},"password":null,"pastMabExperimentIds":[],"performableGuid":null,"performableVariationLetter":null,"personalizationStrategyId":null,"personalizationVariantStatus":null,"personas":[],"placementGuids":[],"portableKey":null,"portalId":490937,"position":null,"postBody":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Gary Bowerman, Director of Check-In Asia, and Rebecca Francosky, Director Air Service Development at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) to recap 2024's aviation trends and look ahead to what's in store next year for the industry.

\n

From looking back at a turbulent year in the industry to making predictions about what might happen as we move into 2025, the live panel began by taking a look at global capacity growth trends this year.

\n

Capacity Growth Trends in 2024

\n

As the aviation industry continues to rebound from the significant disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, capacity growth has emerged as a crucial indicator of recovery. In 2024, global capacity ended 6.3% ahead of the previous year, showcasing notable resilience. However, the industry is still grappling with the loss of five years of expected growth, a challenge compounded by ongoing supply chain disruptions.

\n
\n

regional changes

\n

The panel then discussed regional changes during the year. While four aviation markets are not yet back to 2019 levels (Southern Africa, South-East Asia, Eastern Europe, and Southwest Pacific) the fastest growing regions include Central Asia, Upper South America, and North Africa, all of which have double digit growth compared to 2019.

\n
\n

Predictions for 2025

\n

As the world began to open from COVID lockdowns, it was reported that air travel would not fully recover until 2025. With 2025 on the horizon, our panel gave their thoughts on what the industry will look like next year. What obstacles lie ahead?

\n
\n

Watch the Full Webinar Below:

\n
\n

DOWNLOAD SLIDES 

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","postBodyRss":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Gary Bowerman, Director of Check-In Asia, and Rebecca Francosky, Director Air Service Development at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) to recap 2024's aviation trends and look ahead to what's in store next year for the industry.

\n

From looking back at a turbulent year in the industry to making predictions about what might happen as we move into 2025, the live panel began by taking a look at global capacity growth trends this year.

\n

Capacity Growth Trends in 2024

\n

As the aviation industry continues to rebound from the significant disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, capacity growth has emerged as a crucial indicator of recovery. In 2024, global capacity ended 6.3% ahead of the previous year, showcasing notable resilience. However, the industry is still grappling with the loss of five years of expected growth, a challenge compounded by ongoing supply chain disruptions.

\n
\n

regional changes

\n

The panel then discussed regional changes during the year. While four aviation markets are not yet back to 2019 levels (Southern Africa, South-East Asia, Eastern Europe, and Southwest Pacific) the fastest growing regions include Central Asia, Upper South America, and North Africa, all of which have double digit growth compared to 2019.

\n
\n

Predictions for 2025

\n

As the world began to open from COVID lockdowns, it was reported that air travel would not fully recover until 2025. With 2025 on the horizon, our panel gave their thoughts on what the industry will look like next year. What obstacles lie ahead?

\n
\n

Watch the Full Webinar Below:

\n
\n

DOWNLOAD SLIDES 

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","postEmailContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Gary Bowerman, Director of Check-In Asia, and Rebecca Francosky, Director Air Service Development at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) to recap 2024's aviation trends and look ahead to what's in store next year for the industry.

\n

From looking back at a turbulent year in the industry to making predictions about what might happen as we move into 2025, the live panel began by taking a look at global capacity growth trends this year.

\n

Capacity Growth Trends in 2024

\n

As the aviation industry continues to rebound from the significant disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, capacity growth has emerged as a crucial indicator of recovery. In 2024, global capacity ended 6.3% ahead of the previous year, showcasing notable resilience. However, the industry is still grappling with the loss of five years of expected growth, a challenge compounded by ongoing supply chain disruptions.

\n
\n

regional changes

\n

The panel then discussed regional changes during the year. While four aviation markets are not yet back to 2019 levels (Southern Africa, South-East Asia, Eastern Europe, and Southwest Pacific) the fastest growing regions include Central Asia, Upper South America, and North Africa, all of which have double digit growth compared to 2019.

\n
\n

Predictions for 2025

\n

As the world began to open from COVID lockdowns, it was reported that air travel would not fully recover until 2025. With 2025 on the horizon, our panel gave their thoughts on what the industry will look like next year. What obstacles lie ahead?

\n
\n

Watch the Full Webinar Below:

\n
\n

DOWNLOAD SLIDES 

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Webinar%20December%204th.jpg","postListContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Gary Bowerman, Director of Check-In Asia, and Rebecca Francosky, Director Air Service Development at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) to recap 2024's aviation trends and look ahead to what's in store next year for the industry.

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Webinar%20December%204th.jpg","postRssContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Gary Bowerman, Director of Check-In Asia, and Rebecca Francosky, Director Air Service Development at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) to recap 2024's aviation trends and look ahead to what's in store next year for the industry.

\n

From looking back at a turbulent year in the industry to making predictions about what might happen as we move into 2025, the live panel began by taking a look at global capacity growth trends this year.

\n

Capacity Growth Trends in 2024

\n

As the aviation industry continues to rebound from the significant disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, capacity growth has emerged as a crucial indicator of recovery. In 2024, global capacity ended 6.3% ahead of the previous year, showcasing notable resilience. However, the industry is still grappling with the loss of five years of expected growth, a challenge compounded by ongoing supply chain disruptions.

\n
\n

regional changes

\n

The panel then discussed regional changes during the year. While four aviation markets are not yet back to 2019 levels (Southern Africa, South-East Asia, Eastern Europe, and Southwest Pacific) the fastest growing regions include Central Asia, Upper South America, and North Africa, all of which have double digit growth compared to 2019.

\n
\n

Predictions for 2025

\n

As the world began to open from COVID lockdowns, it was reported that air travel would not fully recover until 2025. With 2025 on the horizon, our panel gave their thoughts on what the industry will look like next year. What obstacles lie ahead?

\n
\n

Watch the Full Webinar Below:

\n
\n

DOWNLOAD SLIDES 

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"","postSummary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Gary Bowerman, Director of Check-In Asia, and Rebecca Francosky, Director Air Service Development at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) to recap 2024's aviation trends and look ahead to what's in store next year for the industry.

","postSummaryRss":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Gary Bowerman, Director of Check-In Asia, and Rebecca Francosky, Director Air Service Development at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) to recap 2024's aviation trends and look ahead to what's in store next year for the industry.

","postTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"MKqrUjkA","previousPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Feb%20webinar%203.jpg","previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","previousPostName":"A New Era of Enforced Capacity Discipline","previousPostSlug":"webinars/a-new-era-of-enforced-capacity-discipline","processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1733418000000,"publishDateLocalTime":1733418000000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1733418000000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":null},"publishImmediately":false,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1733418000645,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":64413925,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/webinars/what-does-2025-have-in-store-for-the-aviation-industry","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Gary Bowerman, Director of Check-In Asia, and Rebecca Francosky, Director Air Service Development at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) to recap 2024's aviation trends and look ahead to what's in store next year for the industry.

\n

From looking back at a turbulent year in the industry to making predictions about what might happen as we move into 2025, the live panel began by taking a look at global capacity growth trends this year.

\n

Capacity Growth Trends in 2024

\n

As the aviation industry continues to rebound from the significant disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, capacity growth has emerged as a crucial indicator of recovery. In 2024, global capacity ended 6.3% ahead of the previous year, showcasing notable resilience. However, the industry is still grappling with the loss of five years of expected growth, a challenge compounded by ongoing supply chain disruptions.

\n
\n

regional changes

\n

The panel then discussed regional changes during the year. While four aviation markets are not yet back to 2019 levels (Southern Africa, South-East Asia, Eastern Europe, and Southwest Pacific) the fastest growing regions include Central Asia, Upper South America, and North Africa, all of which have double digit growth compared to 2019.

\n
\n

Predictions for 2025

\n

As the world began to open from COVID lockdowns, it was reported that air travel would not fully recover until 2025. With 2025 on the horizon, our panel gave their thoughts on what the industry will look like next year. What obstacles lie ahead?

\n
\n

Watch the Full Webinar Below:

\n
\n

DOWNLOAD SLIDES 

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","rssSummary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Gary Bowerman, Director of Check-In Asia, and Rebecca Francosky, Director Air Service Development at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL) to recap 2024's aviation trends and look ahead to what's in store next year for the industry.

","rssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Webinar%20December%204th.jpg","scheduledUpdateDate":0,"screenshotPreviewTakenAt":1747760401073,"screenshotPreviewUrl":"https://cdn1.hubspot.net/hubshotv3/prod/e/0/6369221a-59cb-46c1-9567-7236fdf256c0.png","sections":{},"securityState":"NONE","siteId":null,"slug":"webinars/what-does-2025-have-in-store-for-the-aviation-industry","stagedFrom":null,"state":"PUBLISHED","stateWhenDeleted":null,"structuredContentPageType":null,"structuredContentType":null,"styleOverrideId":null,"subcategory":"normal_blog_post","syncedWithBlogRoot":true,"tagIds":[67554932020],"tagList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1646238071339,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":67554932020,"label":"Webinars","language":"en-gb","name":"Webinars","portalId":490937,"slug":"webinars","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1646238071339}],"tagNames":["Webinars"],"teamPerms":[],"templatePath":"","templatePathForRender":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","textToAudioFileId":null,"textToAudioGenerationRequestId":null,"themePath":null,"themeSettingsValues":null,"title":"What Does 2025 Have In Store for the Aviation Industry? | Aviation Webinars","tmsId":null,"topicIds":[67554932020],"topicList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1646238071339,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":67554932020,"label":"Webinars","language":"en-gb","name":"Webinars","portalId":490937,"slug":"webinars","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1646238071339}],"topicNames":["Webinars"],"topics":[67554932020],"translatedContent":{},"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"tweet":null,"tweetAt":null,"tweetImmediately":false,"unpublishedAt":0,"updated":1733418001409,"updatedById":64413925,"upsizeFeaturedImage":false,"url":"https://www.oag.com/webinars/what-does-2025-have-in-store-for-the-aviation-industry","useFeaturedImage":true,"userPerms":[],"views":null,"visibleToAll":null,"widgetContainers":{},"widgetcontainers":{},"widgets":{}},{"ab":false,"abStatus":null,"abTestId":null,"abVariation":false,"abVariationAutomated":false,"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts/dave-ingram-gategroup","afterPostBody":null,"aifeatures":null,"allowedSlugConflict":false,"analytics":null,"analyticsPageId":"129184883071","analyticsPageType":"blog-post","approvalStatus":null,"archived":false,"archivedAt":0,"archivedInDashboard":false,"areCommentsAllowed":true,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","author":null,"authorName":null,"authorUsername":null,"blogAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/www.oag.com/Images/OAG_John_Grant.jpg","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1475227847472,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"John Grant","email":"john.grant@oag.com","facebook":"","fullName":"John Grant","gravatarUrl":"https://app.hubspot.com/settings/avatar/b598c5e03482db185cd10238828b7984","hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":4384658544,"label":"John Grant","language":null,"linkedin":"https://uk.linkedin.com/in/john-grant-919a871a","name":"John Grant","portalId":490937,"slug":"john-grant","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"","twitterUsername":"","updated":1645440628109,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":""},"blogAuthorId":4384658544,"blogPostAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/www.oag.com/Images/OAG_John_Grant.jpg","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1475227847472,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"John Grant","email":"john.grant@oag.com","facebook":"","fullName":"John Grant","gravatarUrl":"https://app.hubspot.com/settings/avatar/b598c5e03482db185cd10238828b7984","hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":4384658544,"label":"John Grant","language":null,"linkedin":"https://uk.linkedin.com/in/john-grant-919a871a","name":"John Grant","portalId":490937,"slug":"john-grant","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"","twitterUsername":"","updated":1645440628109,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":""},"blogPostScheduleTaskUid":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailCampaignId":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailRetryCount":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailTaskUid":"DONE","blogPublishToSocialMediaTask":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blueprintTypeId":0,"businessUnitId":null,"campaign":null,"campaignName":null,"campaignUtm":null,"category":3,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"checkPostLevelAudienceAccessFirst":true,"clonedFrom":null,"composeBody":null,"compositionId":0,"contentAccessRuleIds":[],"contentAccessRuleTypes":[],"contentGroup":29502054281,"contentGroupId":29502054281,"contentTypeCategory":3,"contentTypeCategoryId":3,"contentTypeId":null,"created":1691569755517,"createdByAgent":null,"createdById":11440745,"createdTime":1691569755517,"crmObjectId":null,"css":{},"cssText":"","ctaClicks":null,"ctaViews":null,"currentState":"PUBLISHED","currentlyPublished":true,"deletedAt":0,"deletedBy":null,"deletedByEmail":null,"deletedById":null,"domain":"","dynamicPageDataSourceId":null,"dynamicPageDataSourceType":null,"dynamicPageHubDbTableId":null,"enableDomainStylesheets":null,"enableGoogleAmpOutputOverride":false,"enableLayoutStylesheets":null,"errors":[],"featuredImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/Airline-Catering.jpg","featuredImageAltText":"Airline-Catering","featuredImageHeight":900,"featuredImageLength":0,"featuredImageWidth":1600,"flexAreas":{},"folderId":null,"footerHtml":null,"freezeDate":1695809517000,"generateJsonLdEnabledOverride":true,"hasContentAccessRules":false,"hasUserChanges":true,"headHtml":null,"header":null,"htmlTitle":"On Air: in conversation with Dave Ingram from gategroup | Aviation Podcast","id":129184883071,"includeDefaultCustomCss":null,"isCaptchaRequired":true,"isCrawlableByBots":false,"isDraft":false,"isInstanceLayoutPage":false,"isInstantEmailEnabled":true,"isPublished":true,"isSocialPublishingEnabled":false,"keywords":[],"label":"On Air: in conversation with Dave Ingram from gategroup","language":"en-gb","lastEditSessionId":null,"lastEditUpdateId":null,"layoutSections":{},"legacyBlogTabid":null,"legacyId":null,"legacyPostGuid":null,"linkRelCanonicalUrl":null,"listTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","mab":false,"mabExperimentId":null,"mabMaster":false,"mabVariant":false,"meta":{"html_title":"On Air: in conversation with Dave Ingram from gategroup | Aviation Podcast","public_access_rules":[],"public_access_rules_enabled":false,"post_body":"

Airline catering plays a pivotal role in the aviation supply chain, ensuring that passengers are provided with in-flight meals and that airports worldwide are well-stocked with catering supplies. It is an indispensable aspect of the aviation industry that requires meticulous resource management.

\n

During the busiest months, the demand on airline catering is significant, placing immense pressure on suppliers to deliver exceptional service. To meet this demand, companies like gategroup - the leading airline catering and retail-on-board supplier - engage in a daily preparation process that encompasses a multitude of complex operations.

\n

John Grant (Chief Analyst at OAG) speaks to Dave Ingram, Senior Project Manager at gategroup to discuss how they manage an intricate operation and the challenges they often face. Tune in now...

\n
 
\n

\"Dave-Ingram-OAG-On-Air-Podcast\"

\n

You can also listen here: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Stitcher, Tune In

\n

Or search for OAG On Air on your preferred podcast provider! 🎧

\n

Check-out all our aviation podcasts here 

\n

OAG On Air Subscribe Now

","rss_summary":"

Airline catering plays a pivotal role in the aviation supply chain, ensuring that passengers are provided with in-flight meals and that airports worldwide are well-stocked with catering supplies. It is an indispensable aspect of the aviation industry that requires meticulous resource management.

","tag_ids":[129186578721,136739011896],"topic_ids":[129186578721,136739011896],"enable_google_amp_output_override":false,"generate_json_ld_enabled":true,"post_summary":"

Airline catering plays a pivotal role in the aviation supply chain, ensuring that passengers are provided with in-flight meals and that airports worldwide are well-stocked with catering supplies. It is an indispensable aspect of the aviation industry that requires meticulous resource management.

","blog_post_schedule_task_uid":null,"blog_publish_to_social_media_task":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blog_publish_instant_email_task_uid":"DONE","blog_publish_instant_email_campaign_id":null,"blog_publish_instant_email_retry_count":null,"rss_body":"

Airline catering plays a pivotal role in the aviation supply chain, ensuring that passengers are provided with in-flight meals and that airports worldwide are well-stocked with catering supplies. It is an indispensable aspect of the aviation industry that requires meticulous resource management.

\n

During the busiest months, the demand on airline catering is significant, placing immense pressure on suppliers to deliver exceptional service. To meet this demand, companies like gategroup - the leading airline catering and retail-on-board supplier - engage in a daily preparation process that encompasses a multitude of complex operations.

\n

John Grant (Chief Analyst at OAG) speaks to Dave Ingram, Senior Project Manager at gategroup to discuss how they manage an intricate operation and the challenges they often face. Tune in now...

\n
 
\n

\"Dave-Ingram-OAG-On-Air-Podcast\"

\n

You can also listen here: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Stitcher, Tune In

\n

Or search for OAG On Air on your preferred podcast provider! 🎧

\n

Check-out all our aviation podcasts here 

\n

OAG On Air Subscribe Now

","keywords":[],"composition_id":0,"is_crawlable_by_bots":false,"use_featured_image":true,"published_at":1695813437777,"head_html":null,"footer_html":null,"attached_stylesheets":[],"enable_domain_stylesheets":null,"include_default_custom_css":null,"layout_sections":{},"past_mab_experiment_ids":[],"deleted_by":null,"featured_image_alt_text":"Airline-Catering","enable_layout_stylesheets":null,"tweet":null,"tweet_at":null,"campaign_name":null,"campaign_utm":null,"meta_keywords":null,"meta_description":"Listen to our latest podcast featuring guest Dave Ingram from gategroup who discusses the complexities of airline catering and more...","tweet_immediately":false,"publish_immediately":true,"security_state":"NONE","scheduled_update_date":0,"placement_guids":[],"property_for_dynamic_page_title":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_slug":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_meta_description":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_featured_image":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_canonical_url":null,"preview_image_src":null,"legacy_blog_tabid":null,"legacy_post_guid":null,"performable_variation_letter":null,"style_override_id":null,"has_user_changes":true,"css":{},"css_text":"","unpublished_at":0,"published_by_id":11440745,"allowed_slug_conflict":false,"ai_features":null,"link_rel_canonical_url":null,"page_redirected":false,"page_expiry_enabled":null,"page_expiry_date":null,"page_expiry_redirect_id":null,"page_expiry_redirect_url":null,"deleted_by_id":null,"state_when_deleted":null,"cloned_from":null,"staged_from":null,"personas":[],"compose_body":null,"featured_image":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/Airline-Catering.jpg","featured_image_width":1600,"featured_image_height":900,"publish_timezone_offset":null,"theme_settings_values":null,"password":null,"header":null,"last_edit_session_id":null,"last_edit_update_id":null,"created_by_agent":null},"metaDescription":"Listen to our latest podcast featuring guest Dave Ingram from gategroup who discusses the complexities of airline catering and more...","metaKeywords":null,"name":"On Air: in conversation with Dave Ingram from gategroup","nextPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/pascan-aviation.jpg","nextPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","nextPostName":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation","nextPostSlug":"podcasts/julian-roberts-pascan","pageExpiryDate":null,"pageExpiryEnabled":null,"pageExpiryRedirectId":null,"pageExpiryRedirectUrl":null,"pageRedirected":false,"pageTitle":"On Air: in conversation with Dave Ingram from gategroup | Aviation Podcast","parentBlog":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts","allowComments":true,"ampBodyColor":"#404040","ampBodyFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampBodyFontSize":"18","ampCustomCss":"","ampHeaderBackgroundColor":"#ffffff","ampHeaderColor":"#1e1e1e","ampHeaderFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampHeaderFontSize":"36","ampLinkColor":"#416bb3","ampLogoAlt":"","ampLogoHeight":0,"ampLogoSrc":"","ampLogoWidth":0,"analyticsPageId":29502054281,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","businessUnitId":null,"captchaAfterDays":7,"captchaAlways":false,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"closeCommentsOlder":0,"commentDateFormat":"medium","commentFormGuid":"af838a2f-e845-4208-9c7b-dac50b10f26d","commentMaxThreadDepth":1,"commentModeration":false,"commentNotificationEmails":[],"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentVerificationText":"","cosObjectType":"BLOG","created":1589808702104,"createdDateTime":1589808702104,"dailyNotificationEmailId":null,"dateFormattingLanguage":null,"defaultGroupStyleId":"","defaultNotificationFromName":"","defaultNotificationReplyTo":"","deletedAt":0,"description":"Podcasts","domain":"","domainWhenPublished":"www.oag.com","emailApiSubscriptionId":9703393,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":true,"enableSocialAutoPublishing":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false,"header":null,"htmlFooter":"","htmlFooterIsShared":true,"htmlHead":"","htmlHeadIsShared":true,"htmlKeywords":[],"htmlTitle":"Podcasts","id":29502054281,"ilsSubscriptionListsByType":{"instant":3450},"instantNotificationEmailId":"78546156056","itemLayoutId":null,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"itemTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","label":"Podcasts","language":"en-gb","legacyGuid":null,"legacyModuleId":null,"legacyTabId":null,"listingLayoutId":null,"listingPageId":null,"listingTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","monthFilterFormat":"MMMM yyyy","monthlyNotificationEmailId":null,"name":"Podcasts","parentBlogUpdateTaskId":null,"portalId":490937,"postHtmlFooter":"","postHtmlHead":"","postsPerListingPage":10000,"postsPerRssFeed":10,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publicTitle":"Podcasts","publishDateFormat":"dd MMMM yyyy","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","rootUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts","rssCustomFeed":null,"rssDescription":null,"rssItemFooter":null,"rssItemHeader":null,"settingsOverrides":{"itemLayoutId":false,"itemTemplatePath":false,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"listingLayoutId":false,"listingTemplatePath":false,"postsPerListingPage":false,"showSummaryInListing":false,"useFeaturedImageInSummary":false,"htmlHead":false,"postHtmlHead":false,"htmlHeadIsShared":false,"htmlFooter":false,"listingPageHtmlFooter":false,"postHtmlFooter":false,"htmlFooterIsShared":false,"attachedStylesheets":false,"postsPerRssFeed":false,"showSummaryInRss":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummariesInEmails":false,"allowComments":false,"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentModeration":false,"closeCommentsOlder":false,"commentNotificationEmails":false,"commentMaxThreadDepth":false,"commentVerificationText":false,"socialAccountTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"ampLogoSrc":false,"ampLogoHeight":false,"ampLogoWidth":false,"ampLogoAlt":false,"ampHeaderFont":false,"ampHeaderFontSize":false,"ampHeaderColor":false,"ampHeaderBackgroundColor":false,"ampBodyFont":false,"ampBodyFontSize":false,"ampBodyColor":false,"ampLinkColor":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false},"showSocialLinkFacebook":true,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":true,"showSocialLinkTwitter":true,"showSummaryInEmails":true,"showSummaryInListing":true,"showSummaryInRss":true,"siteId":null,"slug":"podcasts","socialAccountTwitter":"","state":null,"subscriptionContactsProperty":"blog_podcasts_29502054281_subscription","subscriptionEmailType":null,"subscriptionFormGuid":"a128cddf-a9c4-4184-86a8-5d03e7a95cc0","subscriptionListsByType":{"instant":5970},"title":null,"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1699002080096,"updatedDateTime":1699002080096,"urlBase":"www.oag.com/podcasts","urlSegments":{"all":"all","archive":"archive","author":"author","page":"page","tag":"tag"},"useFeaturedImageInSummary":true,"usesDefaultTemplate":false,"weeklyNotificationEmailId":null},"password":null,"pastMabExperimentIds":[],"performableGuid":null,"performableVariationLetter":null,"personalizationStrategyId":null,"personalizationVariantStatus":null,"personas":[],"placementGuids":[],"portableKey":null,"portalId":490937,"position":null,"postBody":"

Airline catering plays a pivotal role in the aviation supply chain, ensuring that passengers are provided with in-flight meals and that airports worldwide are well-stocked with catering supplies. It is an indispensable aspect of the aviation industry that requires meticulous resource management.

\n

During the busiest months, the demand on airline catering is significant, placing immense pressure on suppliers to deliver exceptional service. To meet this demand, companies like gategroup - the leading airline catering and retail-on-board supplier - engage in a daily preparation process that encompasses a multitude of complex operations.

\n

John Grant (Chief Analyst at OAG) speaks to Dave Ingram, Senior Project Manager at gategroup to discuss how they manage an intricate operation and the challenges they often face. Tune in now...

\n
 
\n

\"Dave-Ingram-OAG-On-Air-Podcast\"

\n

You can also listen here: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Stitcher, Tune In

\n

Or search for OAG On Air on your preferred podcast provider! 🎧

\n

Check-out all our aviation podcasts here 

\n

OAG On Air Subscribe Now

","postBodyRss":"

Airline catering plays a pivotal role in the aviation supply chain, ensuring that passengers are provided with in-flight meals and that airports worldwide are well-stocked with catering supplies. It is an indispensable aspect of the aviation industry that requires meticulous resource management.

\n

During the busiest months, the demand on airline catering is significant, placing immense pressure on suppliers to deliver exceptional service. To meet this demand, companies like gategroup - the leading airline catering and retail-on-board supplier - engage in a daily preparation process that encompasses a multitude of complex operations.

\n

John Grant (Chief Analyst at OAG) speaks to Dave Ingram, Senior Project Manager at gategroup to discuss how they manage an intricate operation and the challenges they often face. Tune in now...

\n
 
\n

\"Dave-Ingram-OAG-On-Air-Podcast\"

\n

You can also listen here: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Stitcher, Tune In

\n

Or search for OAG On Air on your preferred podcast provider! 🎧

\n

Check-out all our aviation podcasts here 

\n

OAG On Air Subscribe Now

","postEmailContent":"

Airline catering plays a pivotal role in the aviation supply chain, ensuring that passengers are provided with in-flight meals and that airports worldwide are well-stocked with catering supplies. It is an indispensable aspect of the aviation industry that requires meticulous resource management.

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/Airline-Catering.jpg","postListContent":"

Airline catering plays a pivotal role in the aviation supply chain, ensuring that passengers are provided with in-flight meals and that airports worldwide are well-stocked with catering supplies. It is an indispensable aspect of the aviation industry that requires meticulous resource management.

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/Airline-Catering.jpg","postRssContent":"

Airline catering plays a pivotal role in the aviation supply chain, ensuring that passengers are provided with in-flight meals and that airports worldwide are well-stocked with catering supplies. It is an indispensable aspect of the aviation industry that requires meticulous resource management.

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/Airline-Catering.jpg","postSummary":"

Airline catering plays a pivotal role in the aviation supply chain, ensuring that passengers are provided with in-flight meals and that airports worldwide are well-stocked with catering supplies. It is an indispensable aspect of the aviation industry that requires meticulous resource management.

","postSummaryRss":"

Airline catering plays a pivotal role in the aviation supply chain, ensuring that passengers are provided with in-flight meals and that airports worldwide are well-stocked with catering supplies. It is an indispensable aspect of the aviation industry that requires meticulous resource management.

","postTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"zWmzgseS","previousPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/pascan-aviation.jpg","previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","previousPostName":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation","previousPostSlug":"podcasts/julian-roberts-pascan","processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1695809517000,"publishDateLocalTime":1695809517000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1695809517000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":null},"publishImmediately":true,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1695813437777,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":11440745,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts/dave-ingram-gategroup","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

Airline catering plays a pivotal role in the aviation supply chain, ensuring that passengers are provided with in-flight meals and that airports worldwide are well-stocked with catering supplies. It is an indispensable aspect of the aviation industry that requires meticulous resource management.

\n

During the busiest months, the demand on airline catering is significant, placing immense pressure on suppliers to deliver exceptional service. To meet this demand, companies like gategroup - the leading airline catering and retail-on-board supplier - engage in a daily preparation process that encompasses a multitude of complex operations.

\n

John Grant (Chief Analyst at OAG) speaks to Dave Ingram, Senior Project Manager at gategroup to discuss how they manage an intricate operation and the challenges they often face. Tune in now...

\n
 
\n

\"Dave-Ingram-OAG-On-Air-Podcast\"

\n

You can also listen here: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Stitcher, Tune In

\n

Or search for OAG On Air on your preferred podcast provider! 🎧

\n

Check-out all our aviation podcasts here 

\n

OAG On Air Subscribe Now

","rssSummary":"

Airline catering plays a pivotal role in the aviation supply chain, ensuring that passengers are provided with in-flight meals and that airports worldwide are well-stocked with catering supplies. It is an indispensable aspect of the aviation industry that requires meticulous resource management.

","rssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/Airline-Catering.jpg","scheduledUpdateDate":0,"screenshotPreviewTakenAt":1746011835820,"screenshotPreviewUrl":"https://cdn1.hubspot.net/hubshotv3/prod/e/0/27922908-d914-4de7-96bb-82efc52f3891.png","sections":{},"securityState":"NONE","siteId":null,"slug":"podcasts/dave-ingram-gategroup","stagedFrom":null,"state":"PUBLISHED","stateWhenDeleted":null,"structuredContentPageType":null,"structuredContentType":null,"styleOverrideId":null,"subcategory":"normal_blog_post","syncedWithBlogRoot":true,"tagIds":[129186578721,136739011896],"tagList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1691572187281,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":129186578721,"label":"Airline Catering","language":"en-gb","name":"Airline Catering","portalId":490937,"slug":"airline-catering","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1691572187281},{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1695813421932,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":136739011896,"label":"Podcast","language":"en-gb","name":"Podcast","portalId":490937,"slug":"podcast","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1695813421932}],"tagNames":["Airline Catering","Podcast"],"teamPerms":[],"templatePath":"","templatePathForRender":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","textToAudioFileId":null,"textToAudioGenerationRequestId":null,"themePath":null,"themeSettingsValues":null,"title":"On Air: in conversation with Dave Ingram from gategroup | Aviation Podcast","tmsId":null,"topicIds":[129186578721,136739011896],"topicList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1691572187281,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":129186578721,"label":"Airline Catering","language":"en-gb","name":"Airline Catering","portalId":490937,"slug":"airline-catering","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1691572187281},{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1695813421932,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":136739011896,"label":"Podcast","language":"en-gb","name":"Podcast","portalId":490937,"slug":"podcast","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1695813421932}],"topicNames":["Airline Catering","Podcast"],"topics":[129186578721,136739011896],"translatedContent":{},"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"tweet":null,"tweetAt":null,"tweetImmediately":false,"unpublishedAt":0,"updated":1695813437782,"updatedById":11440745,"upsizeFeaturedImage":false,"url":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts/dave-ingram-gategroup","useFeaturedImage":true,"userPerms":[],"views":null,"visibleToAll":null,"widgetContainers":{},"widgetcontainers":{},"widgets":{}},{"ab":false,"abStatus":null,"abTestId":null,"abVariation":false,"abVariationAutomated":false,"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts/julian-roberts-pascan","afterPostBody":null,"aifeatures":null,"allowedSlugConflict":false,"analytics":null,"analyticsPageId":"84187721540","analyticsPageType":"blog-post","approvalStatus":null,"archived":false,"archivedAt":0,"archivedInDashboard":false,"areCommentsAllowed":true,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","author":null,"authorName":null,"authorUsername":null,"blogAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/www.oag.com/Images/OAG_John_Grant.jpg","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1475227847472,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"John Grant","email":"john.grant@oag.com","facebook":"","fullName":"John Grant","gravatarUrl":"https://app.hubspot.com/settings/avatar/b598c5e03482db185cd10238828b7984","hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":4384658544,"label":"John Grant","language":null,"linkedin":"https://uk.linkedin.com/in/john-grant-919a871a","name":"John Grant","portalId":490937,"slug":"john-grant","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"","twitterUsername":"","updated":1645440628109,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":""},"blogAuthorId":4384658544,"blogPostAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/www.oag.com/Images/OAG_John_Grant.jpg","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1475227847472,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"John Grant","email":"john.grant@oag.com","facebook":"","fullName":"John Grant","gravatarUrl":"https://app.hubspot.com/settings/avatar/b598c5e03482db185cd10238828b7984","hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":4384658544,"label":"John Grant","language":null,"linkedin":"https://uk.linkedin.com/in/john-grant-919a871a","name":"John Grant","portalId":490937,"slug":"john-grant","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"","twitterUsername":"","updated":1645440628109,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":""},"blogPostScheduleTaskUid":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailCampaignId":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailRetryCount":0,"blogPublishInstantEmailTaskUid":"DONE","blogPublishToSocialMediaTask":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blueprintTypeId":0,"businessUnitId":null,"campaign":"ed96c82e-c43a-4ea8-ac05-e61d095b1e21","campaignName":"Podcast","campaignUtm":"Podcast","category":3,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"checkPostLevelAudienceAccessFirst":true,"clonedFrom":71506049860,"composeBody":null,"compositionId":0,"contentAccessRuleIds":[],"contentAccessRuleTypes":[],"contentGroup":29502054281,"contentGroupId":29502054281,"contentTypeCategory":3,"contentTypeCategoryId":3,"contentTypeId":null,"created":1662541387059,"createdByAgent":null,"createdById":11440745,"createdTime":1662541387059,"crmObjectId":null,"css":{},"cssText":"","ctaClicks":null,"ctaViews":null,"currentState":"PUBLISHED","currentlyPublished":true,"deletedAt":0,"deletedBy":null,"deletedByEmail":null,"deletedById":null,"domain":"","dynamicPageDataSourceId":null,"dynamicPageDataSourceType":null,"dynamicPageHubDbTableId":null,"enableDomainStylesheets":null,"enableGoogleAmpOutputOverride":false,"enableLayoutStylesheets":null,"errors":[],"featuredImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/pascan-aviation.jpg","featuredImageAltText":"","featuredImageHeight":900,"featuredImageLength":0,"featuredImageWidth":1600,"flexAreas":{},"folderId":null,"footerHtml":null,"freezeDate":1663857000000,"generateJsonLdEnabledOverride":true,"hasContentAccessRules":false,"hasUserChanges":true,"headHtml":null,"header":null,"htmlTitle":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation","id":84187721540,"includeDefaultCustomCss":null,"isCaptchaRequired":true,"isCrawlableByBots":false,"isDraft":false,"isInstanceLayoutPage":false,"isInstantEmailEnabled":true,"isPublished":true,"isSocialPublishingEnabled":false,"keywords":[],"label":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation","language":"en-gb","lastEditSessionId":null,"lastEditUpdateId":null,"layoutSections":{},"legacyBlogTabid":null,"legacyId":null,"legacyPostGuid":"","linkRelCanonicalUrl":null,"listTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","mab":false,"mabExperimentId":null,"mabMaster":false,"mabVariant":false,"meta":{"html_title":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation","public_access_rules":[],"public_access_rules_enabled":false,"post_body":"

In this podcast, John Grant talks to Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation - an independent regional carrier based in Quebec, Canada. 

\n\n

The real heart of aviation is the small regional carriers, like Pascan Aviation, that provide connectivity to small cities and make sure that commercial business can continue in those communities.

\n

\"Julian-Roberts-OAG-On-Air-Podcast
Pascan Aviation have worked their way through the pandemic and are now seizing new opportunities as they expand out from Quebec. Listen to this podcast where Julian Roberts explains the difficulties and challenges faced by regional airlines and the importance of being the \"people's regional airline\".

\n

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

\n

You can also find the podcast on your preferred podcast provider, just search 'OAG On Air'.

\n
 
\n

 

\n

New call-to-action

","rss_summary":"

In this podcast, John Grant talks to Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation - an independent regional carrier based in Quebec, Canada. 

\n","tag_ids":[26961116215],"topic_ids":[26961116215],"enable_google_amp_output_override":false,"generate_json_ld_enabled":true,"post_summary":"

In this podcast, John Grant talks to Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation - an independent regional carrier based in Quebec, Canada. 

\n","blog_post_schedule_task_uid":null,"blog_publish_to_social_media_task":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blog_publish_instant_email_task_uid":"DONE","blog_publish_instant_email_campaign_id":null,"blog_publish_instant_email_retry_count":0,"rss_body":"

In this podcast, John Grant talks to Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation - an independent regional carrier based in Quebec, Canada. 

\n\n

The real heart of aviation is the small regional carriers, like Pascan Aviation, that provide connectivity to small cities and make sure that commercial business can continue in those communities.

\n

\"Julian-Roberts-OAG-On-Air-Podcast
Pascan Aviation have worked their way through the pandemic and are now seizing new opportunities as they expand out from Quebec. Listen to this podcast where Julian Roberts explains the difficulties and challenges faced by regional airlines and the importance of being the \"people's regional airline\".

\n

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

\n

You can also find the podcast on your preferred podcast provider, just search 'OAG On Air'.

\n
 
\n

 

\n

New call-to-action

","keywords":[],"composition_id":0,"is_crawlable_by_bots":false,"use_featured_image":true,"published_at":1677774204911,"head_html":null,"footer_html":null,"attached_stylesheets":[],"enable_domain_stylesheets":null,"include_default_custom_css":null,"layout_sections":{},"past_mab_experiment_ids":[],"deleted_by":null,"featured_image_alt_text":"","enable_layout_stylesheets":null,"tweet":null,"tweet_at":null,"campaign_name":"Podcast","campaign_utm":"Podcast","meta_keywords":null,"meta_description":"John Grant is joined by President and CEO of Pascan Aviation, Julian Roberts to discuss the difficulties and challenges faced by regional airlines.","tweet_immediately":false,"publish_immediately":false,"security_state":"NONE","scheduled_update_date":0,"placement_guids":[],"property_for_dynamic_page_title":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_slug":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_meta_description":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_featured_image":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_canonical_url":null,"preview_image_src":null,"legacy_blog_tabid":null,"legacy_post_guid":"","performable_variation_letter":null,"style_override_id":null,"has_user_changes":true,"css":{},"css_text":"","unpublished_at":0,"published_by_id":26004351,"allowed_slug_conflict":false,"ai_features":null,"link_rel_canonical_url":null,"page_redirected":false,"page_expiry_enabled":false,"page_expiry_date":null,"page_expiry_redirect_id":null,"page_expiry_redirect_url":null,"deleted_by_id":null,"state_when_deleted":null,"cloned_from":71506049860,"staged_from":null,"personas":[],"compose_body":null,"featured_image":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/pascan-aviation.jpg","featured_image_width":1600,"featured_image_height":900,"publish_timezone_offset":null,"theme_settings_values":null,"password":null,"header":null,"last_edit_session_id":null,"last_edit_update_id":null,"created_by_agent":null},"metaDescription":"John Grant is joined by President and CEO of Pascan Aviation, Julian Roberts to discuss the difficulties and challenges faced by regional airlines.","metaKeywords":null,"name":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation","nextPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Fiji-Beach.jpg","nextPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","nextPostName":"On Air: in conversation with Brent Hill, CEO at Tourism Fiji","nextPostSlug":"podcasts/brent-hill-ceo-tourism-fiji","pageExpiryDate":null,"pageExpiryEnabled":false,"pageExpiryRedirectId":null,"pageExpiryRedirectUrl":null,"pageRedirected":false,"pageTitle":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation","parentBlog":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts","allowComments":true,"ampBodyColor":"#404040","ampBodyFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampBodyFontSize":"18","ampCustomCss":"","ampHeaderBackgroundColor":"#ffffff","ampHeaderColor":"#1e1e1e","ampHeaderFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampHeaderFontSize":"36","ampLinkColor":"#416bb3","ampLogoAlt":"","ampLogoHeight":0,"ampLogoSrc":"","ampLogoWidth":0,"analyticsPageId":29502054281,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","businessUnitId":null,"captchaAfterDays":7,"captchaAlways":false,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"closeCommentsOlder":0,"commentDateFormat":"medium","commentFormGuid":"af838a2f-e845-4208-9c7b-dac50b10f26d","commentMaxThreadDepth":1,"commentModeration":false,"commentNotificationEmails":[],"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentVerificationText":"","cosObjectType":"BLOG","created":1589808702104,"createdDateTime":1589808702104,"dailyNotificationEmailId":null,"dateFormattingLanguage":null,"defaultGroupStyleId":"","defaultNotificationFromName":"","defaultNotificationReplyTo":"","deletedAt":0,"description":"Podcasts","domain":"","domainWhenPublished":"www.oag.com","emailApiSubscriptionId":9703393,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":true,"enableSocialAutoPublishing":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false,"header":null,"htmlFooter":"","htmlFooterIsShared":true,"htmlHead":"","htmlHeadIsShared":true,"htmlKeywords":[],"htmlTitle":"Podcasts","id":29502054281,"ilsSubscriptionListsByType":{"instant":3450},"instantNotificationEmailId":"78546156056","itemLayoutId":null,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"itemTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","label":"Podcasts","language":"en-gb","legacyGuid":null,"legacyModuleId":null,"legacyTabId":null,"listingLayoutId":null,"listingPageId":null,"listingTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","monthFilterFormat":"MMMM yyyy","monthlyNotificationEmailId":null,"name":"Podcasts","parentBlogUpdateTaskId":null,"portalId":490937,"postHtmlFooter":"","postHtmlHead":"","postsPerListingPage":10000,"postsPerRssFeed":10,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publicTitle":"Podcasts","publishDateFormat":"dd MMMM yyyy","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","rootUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts","rssCustomFeed":null,"rssDescription":null,"rssItemFooter":null,"rssItemHeader":null,"settingsOverrides":{"itemLayoutId":false,"itemTemplatePath":false,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"listingLayoutId":false,"listingTemplatePath":false,"postsPerListingPage":false,"showSummaryInListing":false,"useFeaturedImageInSummary":false,"htmlHead":false,"postHtmlHead":false,"htmlHeadIsShared":false,"htmlFooter":false,"listingPageHtmlFooter":false,"postHtmlFooter":false,"htmlFooterIsShared":false,"attachedStylesheets":false,"postsPerRssFeed":false,"showSummaryInRss":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummariesInEmails":false,"allowComments":false,"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentModeration":false,"closeCommentsOlder":false,"commentNotificationEmails":false,"commentMaxThreadDepth":false,"commentVerificationText":false,"socialAccountTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"ampLogoSrc":false,"ampLogoHeight":false,"ampLogoWidth":false,"ampLogoAlt":false,"ampHeaderFont":false,"ampHeaderFontSize":false,"ampHeaderColor":false,"ampHeaderBackgroundColor":false,"ampBodyFont":false,"ampBodyFontSize":false,"ampBodyColor":false,"ampLinkColor":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false},"showSocialLinkFacebook":true,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":true,"showSocialLinkTwitter":true,"showSummaryInEmails":true,"showSummaryInListing":true,"showSummaryInRss":true,"siteId":null,"slug":"podcasts","socialAccountTwitter":"","state":null,"subscriptionContactsProperty":"blog_podcasts_29502054281_subscription","subscriptionEmailType":null,"subscriptionFormGuid":"a128cddf-a9c4-4184-86a8-5d03e7a95cc0","subscriptionListsByType":{"instant":5970},"title":null,"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1699002080096,"updatedDateTime":1699002080096,"urlBase":"www.oag.com/podcasts","urlSegments":{"all":"all","archive":"archive","author":"author","page":"page","tag":"tag"},"useFeaturedImageInSummary":true,"usesDefaultTemplate":false,"weeklyNotificationEmailId":null},"password":null,"pastMabExperimentIds":[],"performableGuid":null,"performableVariationLetter":null,"personalizationStrategyId":null,"personalizationVariantStatus":null,"personas":[],"placementGuids":[],"portableKey":null,"portalId":490937,"position":null,"postBody":"

In this podcast, John Grant talks to Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation - an independent regional carrier based in Quebec, Canada. 

\n\n

The real heart of aviation is the small regional carriers, like Pascan Aviation, that provide connectivity to small cities and make sure that commercial business can continue in those communities.

\n

\"Julian-Roberts-OAG-On-Air-Podcast
Pascan Aviation have worked their way through the pandemic and are now seizing new opportunities as they expand out from Quebec. Listen to this podcast where Julian Roberts explains the difficulties and challenges faced by regional airlines and the importance of being the \"people's regional airline\".

\n

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

\n

You can also find the podcast on your preferred podcast provider, just search 'OAG On Air'.

\n
 
\n

 

\n

New call-to-action

","postBodyRss":"

In this podcast, John Grant talks to Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation - an independent regional carrier based in Quebec, Canada. 

\n\n

The real heart of aviation is the small regional carriers, like Pascan Aviation, that provide connectivity to small cities and make sure that commercial business can continue in those communities.

\n

\"Julian-Roberts-OAG-On-Air-Podcast
Pascan Aviation have worked their way through the pandemic and are now seizing new opportunities as they expand out from Quebec. Listen to this podcast where Julian Roberts explains the difficulties and challenges faced by regional airlines and the importance of being the \"people's regional airline\".

\n

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

\n

You can also find the podcast on your preferred podcast provider, just search 'OAG On Air'.

\n
 
\n

 

\n

New call-to-action

","postEmailContent":"

In this podcast, John Grant talks to Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation - an independent regional carrier based in Quebec, Canada. 

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/pascan-aviation.jpg","postListContent":"

In this podcast, John Grant talks to Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation - an independent regional carrier based in Quebec, Canada. 

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/pascan-aviation.jpg","postRssContent":"

In this podcast, John Grant talks to Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation - an independent regional carrier based in Quebec, Canada. 

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/pascan-aviation.jpg","postSummary":"

In this podcast, John Grant talks to Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation - an independent regional carrier based in Quebec, Canada. 

\n","postSummaryRss":"

In this podcast, John Grant talks to Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation - an independent regional carrier based in Quebec, Canada. 

","postTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"psPbYcKL","previousPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/Airline-Catering.jpg","previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":"Airline-Catering","previousPostName":"On Air: in conversation with Dave Ingram from gategroup","previousPostSlug":"podcasts/dave-ingram-gategroup","processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1663857000000,"publishDateLocalTime":1663857000000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1663857000000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":null},"publishImmediately":false,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1677774204911,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":26004351,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts/julian-roberts-pascan","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

In this podcast, John Grant talks to Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation - an independent regional carrier based in Quebec, Canada. 

\n\n

The real heart of aviation is the small regional carriers, like Pascan Aviation, that provide connectivity to small cities and make sure that commercial business can continue in those communities.

\n

\"Julian-Roberts-OAG-On-Air-Podcast
Pascan Aviation have worked their way through the pandemic and are now seizing new opportunities as they expand out from Quebec. Listen to this podcast where Julian Roberts explains the difficulties and challenges faced by regional airlines and the importance of being the \"people's regional airline\".

\n

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

\n

You can also find the podcast on your preferred podcast provider, just search 'OAG On Air'.

\n
 
\n

 

\n

New call-to-action

","rssSummary":"

In this podcast, John Grant talks to Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation - an independent regional carrier based in Quebec, Canada. 

\n","rssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/pascan-aviation.jpg","scheduledUpdateDate":0,"screenshotPreviewTakenAt":1742315002300,"screenshotPreviewUrl":"https://cdn1.hubspot.net/hubshotv3/prod/e/0/5e033ad7-a298-4a3e-8ffe-a1d80a342259.png","sections":{},"securityState":"NONE","siteId":null,"slug":"podcasts/julian-roberts-pascan","stagedFrom":null,"state":"PUBLISHED","stateWhenDeleted":null,"structuredContentPageType":null,"structuredContentType":null,"styleOverrideId":null,"subcategory":"normal_blog_post","syncedWithBlogRoot":true,"tagIds":[26961116215],"tagList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1584029721716,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":26961116215,"label":"COVID-19 Recovery","language":null,"name":"COVID-19 Recovery","portalId":490937,"slug":"covid-19-recovery","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1643209702875}],"tagNames":["COVID-19 Recovery"],"teamPerms":[],"templatePath":"","templatePathForRender":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","textToAudioFileId":null,"textToAudioGenerationRequestId":null,"themePath":null,"themeSettingsValues":null,"title":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation","tmsId":null,"topicIds":[26961116215],"topicList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1584029721716,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":26961116215,"label":"COVID-19 Recovery","language":null,"name":"COVID-19 Recovery","portalId":490937,"slug":"covid-19-recovery","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1643209702875}],"topicNames":["COVID-19 Recovery"],"topics":[26961116215],"translatedContent":{},"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"tweet":null,"tweetAt":null,"tweetImmediately":false,"unpublishedAt":0,"updated":1677774204914,"updatedById":26004351,"upsizeFeaturedImage":false,"url":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts/julian-roberts-pascan","useFeaturedImage":true,"userPerms":[],"views":null,"visibleToAll":null,"widgetContainers":{},"widgetcontainers":{},"widgets":{"module_1645507704457204":{"body":{"module_id":1155826,"value":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nComments:","widget_name":"Header"},"child_css":{},"css":{},"id":"module_1645507704457204","label":"Header","module_id":1155826,"name":"module_1645507704457204","order":7,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"}}},{"ab":false,"abStatus":null,"abTestId":null,"abVariation":false,"abVariationAutomated":false,"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts/brent-hill-ceo-tourism-fiji","afterPostBody":null,"aifeatures":null,"allowedSlugConflict":false,"analytics":null,"analyticsPageId":"77655583913","analyticsPageType":"blog-post","approvalStatus":null,"archived":false,"archivedAt":0,"archivedInDashboard":false,"areCommentsAllowed":true,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","author":null,"authorName":null,"authorUsername":null,"blogAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/www.oag.com/Images/OAG_John_Grant.jpg","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1475227847472,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"John Grant","email":"john.grant@oag.com","facebook":"","fullName":"John Grant","gravatarUrl":"https://app.hubspot.com/settings/avatar/b598c5e03482db185cd10238828b7984","hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":4384658544,"label":"John Grant","language":null,"linkedin":"https://uk.linkedin.com/in/john-grant-919a871a","name":"John Grant","portalId":490937,"slug":"john-grant","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"","twitterUsername":"","updated":1645440628109,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":""},"blogAuthorId":4384658544,"blogPostAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/www.oag.com/Images/OAG_John_Grant.jpg","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1475227847472,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"John Grant","email":"john.grant@oag.com","facebook":"","fullName":"John Grant","gravatarUrl":"https://app.hubspot.com/settings/avatar/b598c5e03482db185cd10238828b7984","hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":4384658544,"label":"John Grant","language":null,"linkedin":"https://uk.linkedin.com/in/john-grant-919a871a","name":"John Grant","portalId":490937,"slug":"john-grant","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"","twitterUsername":"","updated":1645440628109,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":""},"blogPostScheduleTaskUid":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailCampaignId":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailRetryCount":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailTaskUid":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blogPublishToSocialMediaTask":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blueprintTypeId":0,"businessUnitId":null,"campaign":null,"campaignName":null,"campaignUtm":null,"category":3,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"checkPostLevelAudienceAccessFirst":true,"clonedFrom":null,"composeBody":null,"compositionId":0,"contentAccessRuleIds":[],"contentAccessRuleTypes":[],"contentGroup":29502054281,"contentGroupId":29502054281,"contentTypeCategory":3,"contentTypeCategoryId":3,"contentTypeId":null,"created":1656406253607,"createdByAgent":null,"createdById":11440745,"createdTime":1656406253607,"crmObjectId":null,"css":{},"cssText":"","ctaClicks":null,"ctaViews":null,"currentState":"PUBLISHED","currentlyPublished":true,"deletedAt":0,"deletedBy":null,"deletedByEmail":null,"deletedById":null,"domain":"","dynamicPageDataSourceId":null,"dynamicPageDataSourceType":null,"dynamicPageHubDbTableId":null,"enableDomainStylesheets":null,"enableGoogleAmpOutputOverride":false,"enableLayoutStylesheets":null,"errors":[],"featuredImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Fiji-Beach.jpg","featuredImageAltText":"","featuredImageHeight":900,"featuredImageLength":0,"featuredImageWidth":1600,"flexAreas":{},"folderId":null,"footerHtml":null,"freezeDate":1656421440000,"generateJsonLdEnabledOverride":true,"hasContentAccessRules":false,"hasUserChanges":true,"headHtml":null,"header":null,"htmlTitle":"On Air: in conversation with Brent Hill, CEO at Tourism Fiji","id":77655583913,"includeDefaultCustomCss":null,"isCaptchaRequired":true,"isCrawlableByBots":false,"isDraft":false,"isInstanceLayoutPage":false,"isInstantEmailEnabled":true,"isPublished":true,"isSocialPublishingEnabled":false,"keywords":[],"label":"On Air: in conversation with Brent Hill, CEO at Tourism Fiji","language":"en-gb","lastEditSessionId":null,"lastEditUpdateId":null,"layoutSections":{},"legacyBlogTabid":null,"legacyId":null,"legacyPostGuid":null,"linkRelCanonicalUrl":null,"listTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","mab":false,"mabExperimentId":null,"mabMaster":false,"mabVariant":false,"meta":{"html_title":"On Air: in conversation with Brent Hill, CEO at Tourism Fiji","public_access_rules":[],"public_access_rules_enabled":false,"post_body":"

With the global recovery well underway it's noticeable how many destinations are adjusting their strategies and products to be more environmentally friendly and, of course, sustainable. 

In this episode, John Grant talks to Brent Hill, Chief Executive Officer at Tourism Fiji, about how the destination is changing its marketing, product offering and most importantly how it's recovering from a pandemic. For any island economy, air services are essential, and Fiji is one of the few destinations to have both a long-haul local airline and a mix of inbound international services.

\n\n
 
\n

\"Brent-Hill-Tourism-Fiji\"

\n

You can also listen here: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Stitcher, Tune In

\n

Or search for OAG On Air on your preferred podcast provider! 🎧

\n

Learn more about Aviation Sustainability here >>

\n
\n

Recommended:

\n

Flight Emissions Data: Powering Sustainable Aviation | Learn More

\n

Covid-19 Travel Recovery - Critical Aviation Data | View Now

\n

5 Travel Technologies You'll Hear More About In 2023

","rss_summary":"

With the global recovery well underway it's noticeable how many destinations are adjusting their strategies and products to be more environmentally friendly and, of course, sustainable. 

In this episode, John Grant talks to Brent Hill, Chief Executive Officer at Tourism Fiji, about how the destination is changing its marketing, product offering and most importantly how it's recovering from a pandemic. For any island economy, air services are essential, and Fiji is one of the few destinations to have both a long-haul local airline and a mix of inbound international services.

\n","tag_ids":[26961116215],"topic_ids":[26961116215],"enable_google_amp_output_override":false,"generate_json_ld_enabled":true,"post_summary":"

With the global recovery well underway it's noticeable how many destinations are adjusting their strategies and products to be more environmentally friendly and, of course, sustainable. 

In this episode, John Grant talks to Brent Hill, Chief Executive Officer at Tourism Fiji, about how the destination is changing its marketing, product offering and most importantly how it's recovering from a pandemic. For any island economy, air services are essential, and Fiji is one of the few destinations to have both a long-haul local airline and a mix of inbound international services.

\n","blog_post_schedule_task_uid":null,"blog_publish_to_social_media_task":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blog_publish_instant_email_task_uid":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blog_publish_instant_email_campaign_id":null,"blog_publish_instant_email_retry_count":null,"rss_body":"

With the global recovery well underway it's noticeable how many destinations are adjusting their strategies and products to be more environmentally friendly and, of course, sustainable. 

In this episode, John Grant talks to Brent Hill, Chief Executive Officer at Tourism Fiji, about how the destination is changing its marketing, product offering and most importantly how it's recovering from a pandemic. For any island economy, air services are essential, and Fiji is one of the few destinations to have both a long-haul local airline and a mix of inbound international services.

\n\n
 
\n

\"Brent-Hill-Tourism-Fiji\"

\n

You can also listen here: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Stitcher, Tune In

\n

Or search for OAG On Air on your preferred podcast provider! 🎧

\n

Learn more about Aviation Sustainability here >>

\n
\n

Recommended:

\n

Flight Emissions Data: Powering Sustainable Aviation | Learn More

\n

Covid-19 Travel Recovery - Critical Aviation Data | View Now

\n

5 Travel Technologies You'll Hear More About In 2023

","keywords":[],"composition_id":0,"is_crawlable_by_bots":false,"use_featured_image":true,"published_at":1677858729600,"head_html":null,"footer_html":null,"attached_stylesheets":[],"enable_domain_stylesheets":null,"include_default_custom_css":null,"layout_sections":{},"past_mab_experiment_ids":[],"deleted_by":null,"featured_image_alt_text":"","enable_layout_stylesheets":null,"tweet":null,"tweet_at":null,"campaign_name":null,"campaign_utm":null,"meta_keywords":null,"meta_description":"John Grant and Brent Hill, CEO, Tourism Fiji, discuss Fiji's pandemic recovery and how product and marketing have become more environmentally conscious.","tweet_immediately":false,"publish_immediately":false,"security_state":"NONE","scheduled_update_date":0,"placement_guids":[],"property_for_dynamic_page_title":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_slug":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_meta_description":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_featured_image":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_canonical_url":null,"preview_image_src":null,"legacy_blog_tabid":null,"legacy_post_guid":null,"performable_variation_letter":null,"style_override_id":null,"has_user_changes":true,"css":{},"css_text":"","unpublished_at":0,"published_by_id":47234281,"allowed_slug_conflict":false,"ai_features":null,"link_rel_canonical_url":null,"page_redirected":false,"page_expiry_enabled":null,"page_expiry_date":null,"page_expiry_redirect_id":null,"page_expiry_redirect_url":null,"deleted_by_id":null,"state_when_deleted":null,"cloned_from":null,"staged_from":null,"personas":[],"compose_body":null,"featured_image":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Fiji-Beach.jpg","featured_image_width":1600,"featured_image_height":900,"publish_timezone_offset":null,"theme_settings_values":null,"password":null,"header":null,"last_edit_session_id":null,"last_edit_update_id":null,"created_by_agent":null},"metaDescription":"John Grant and Brent Hill, CEO, Tourism Fiji, discuss Fiji's pandemic recovery and how product and marketing have become more environmentally conscious.","metaKeywords":null,"name":"On Air: in conversation with Brent Hill, CEO at Tourism Fiji","nextPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Webinar_Featured_Images/Covid_and_Air_Travel_2.jpg","nextPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","nextPostName":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Campbell Wilson, CEO at Scoot Airlines","nextPostSlug":"podcasts/campbell-wilson-scoot","pageExpiryDate":null,"pageExpiryEnabled":null,"pageExpiryRedirectId":null,"pageExpiryRedirectUrl":null,"pageRedirected":false,"pageTitle":"On Air: in conversation with Brent Hill, CEO at Tourism Fiji","parentBlog":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts","allowComments":true,"ampBodyColor":"#404040","ampBodyFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampBodyFontSize":"18","ampCustomCss":"","ampHeaderBackgroundColor":"#ffffff","ampHeaderColor":"#1e1e1e","ampHeaderFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampHeaderFontSize":"36","ampLinkColor":"#416bb3","ampLogoAlt":"","ampLogoHeight":0,"ampLogoSrc":"","ampLogoWidth":0,"analyticsPageId":29502054281,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","businessUnitId":null,"captchaAfterDays":7,"captchaAlways":false,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"closeCommentsOlder":0,"commentDateFormat":"medium","commentFormGuid":"af838a2f-e845-4208-9c7b-dac50b10f26d","commentMaxThreadDepth":1,"commentModeration":false,"commentNotificationEmails":[],"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentVerificationText":"","cosObjectType":"BLOG","created":1589808702104,"createdDateTime":1589808702104,"dailyNotificationEmailId":null,"dateFormattingLanguage":null,"defaultGroupStyleId":"","defaultNotificationFromName":"","defaultNotificationReplyTo":"","deletedAt":0,"description":"Podcasts","domain":"","domainWhenPublished":"www.oag.com","emailApiSubscriptionId":9703393,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":true,"enableSocialAutoPublishing":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false,"header":null,"htmlFooter":"","htmlFooterIsShared":true,"htmlHead":"","htmlHeadIsShared":true,"htmlKeywords":[],"htmlTitle":"Podcasts","id":29502054281,"ilsSubscriptionListsByType":{"instant":3450},"instantNotificationEmailId":"78546156056","itemLayoutId":null,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"itemTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","label":"Podcasts","language":"en-gb","legacyGuid":null,"legacyModuleId":null,"legacyTabId":null,"listingLayoutId":null,"listingPageId":null,"listingTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","monthFilterFormat":"MMMM yyyy","monthlyNotificationEmailId":null,"name":"Podcasts","parentBlogUpdateTaskId":null,"portalId":490937,"postHtmlFooter":"","postHtmlHead":"","postsPerListingPage":10000,"postsPerRssFeed":10,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publicTitle":"Podcasts","publishDateFormat":"dd MMMM yyyy","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","rootUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts","rssCustomFeed":null,"rssDescription":null,"rssItemFooter":null,"rssItemHeader":null,"settingsOverrides":{"itemLayoutId":false,"itemTemplatePath":false,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"listingLayoutId":false,"listingTemplatePath":false,"postsPerListingPage":false,"showSummaryInListing":false,"useFeaturedImageInSummary":false,"htmlHead":false,"postHtmlHead":false,"htmlHeadIsShared":false,"htmlFooter":false,"listingPageHtmlFooter":false,"postHtmlFooter":false,"htmlFooterIsShared":false,"attachedStylesheets":false,"postsPerRssFeed":false,"showSummaryInRss":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummariesInEmails":false,"allowComments":false,"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentModeration":false,"closeCommentsOlder":false,"commentNotificationEmails":false,"commentMaxThreadDepth":false,"commentVerificationText":false,"socialAccountTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"ampLogoSrc":false,"ampLogoHeight":false,"ampLogoWidth":false,"ampLogoAlt":false,"ampHeaderFont":false,"ampHeaderFontSize":false,"ampHeaderColor":false,"ampHeaderBackgroundColor":false,"ampBodyFont":false,"ampBodyFontSize":false,"ampBodyColor":false,"ampLinkColor":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false},"showSocialLinkFacebook":true,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":true,"showSocialLinkTwitter":true,"showSummaryInEmails":true,"showSummaryInListing":true,"showSummaryInRss":true,"siteId":null,"slug":"podcasts","socialAccountTwitter":"","state":null,"subscriptionContactsProperty":"blog_podcasts_29502054281_subscription","subscriptionEmailType":null,"subscriptionFormGuid":"a128cddf-a9c4-4184-86a8-5d03e7a95cc0","subscriptionListsByType":{"instant":5970},"title":null,"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1699002080096,"updatedDateTime":1699002080096,"urlBase":"www.oag.com/podcasts","urlSegments":{"all":"all","archive":"archive","author":"author","page":"page","tag":"tag"},"useFeaturedImageInSummary":true,"usesDefaultTemplate":false,"weeklyNotificationEmailId":null},"password":null,"pastMabExperimentIds":[],"performableGuid":null,"performableVariationLetter":null,"personalizationStrategyId":null,"personalizationVariantStatus":null,"personas":[],"placementGuids":[],"portableKey":null,"portalId":490937,"position":null,"postBody":"

With the global recovery well underway it's noticeable how many destinations are adjusting their strategies and products to be more environmentally friendly and, of course, sustainable. 

In this episode, John Grant talks to Brent Hill, Chief Executive Officer at Tourism Fiji, about how the destination is changing its marketing, product offering and most importantly how it's recovering from a pandemic. For any island economy, air services are essential, and Fiji is one of the few destinations to have both a long-haul local airline and a mix of inbound international services.

\n\n
 
\n

\"Brent-Hill-Tourism-Fiji\"

\n

You can also listen here: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Stitcher, Tune In

\n

Or search for OAG On Air on your preferred podcast provider! 🎧

\n

Learn more about Aviation Sustainability here >>

\n
\n

Recommended:

\n

Flight Emissions Data: Powering Sustainable Aviation | Learn More

\n

Covid-19 Travel Recovery - Critical Aviation Data | View Now

\n

5 Travel Technologies You'll Hear More About In 2023

","postBodyRss":"

With the global recovery well underway it's noticeable how many destinations are adjusting their strategies and products to be more environmentally friendly and, of course, sustainable. 

In this episode, John Grant talks to Brent Hill, Chief Executive Officer at Tourism Fiji, about how the destination is changing its marketing, product offering and most importantly how it's recovering from a pandemic. For any island economy, air services are essential, and Fiji is one of the few destinations to have both a long-haul local airline and a mix of inbound international services.

\n\n
 
\n

\"Brent-Hill-Tourism-Fiji\"

\n

You can also listen here: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Stitcher, Tune In

\n

Or search for OAG On Air on your preferred podcast provider! 🎧

\n

Learn more about Aviation Sustainability here >>

\n
\n

Recommended:

\n

Flight Emissions Data: Powering Sustainable Aviation | Learn More

\n

Covid-19 Travel Recovery - Critical Aviation Data | View Now

\n

5 Travel Technologies You'll Hear More About In 2023

","postEmailContent":"

With the global recovery well underway it's noticeable how many destinations are adjusting their strategies and products to be more environmentally friendly and, of course, sustainable. 

In this episode, John Grant talks to Brent Hill, Chief Executive Officer at Tourism Fiji, about how the destination is changing its marketing, product offering and most importantly how it's recovering from a pandemic. For any island economy, air services are essential, and Fiji is one of the few destinations to have both a long-haul local airline and a mix of inbound international services.

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Fiji-Beach.jpg","postListContent":"

With the global recovery well underway it's noticeable how many destinations are adjusting their strategies and products to be more environmentally friendly and, of course, sustainable. 

In this episode, John Grant talks to Brent Hill, Chief Executive Officer at Tourism Fiji, about how the destination is changing its marketing, product offering and most importantly how it's recovering from a pandemic. For any island economy, air services are essential, and Fiji is one of the few destinations to have both a long-haul local airline and a mix of inbound international services.

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Fiji-Beach.jpg","postRssContent":"

With the global recovery well underway it's noticeable how many destinations are adjusting their strategies and products to be more environmentally friendly and, of course, sustainable. 

In this episode, John Grant talks to Brent Hill, Chief Executive Officer at Tourism Fiji, about how the destination is changing its marketing, product offering and most importantly how it's recovering from a pandemic. For any island economy, air services are essential, and Fiji is one of the few destinations to have both a long-haul local airline and a mix of inbound international services.

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Fiji-Beach.jpg","postSummary":"

With the global recovery well underway it's noticeable how many destinations are adjusting their strategies and products to be more environmentally friendly and, of course, sustainable. 

In this episode, John Grant talks to Brent Hill, Chief Executive Officer at Tourism Fiji, about how the destination is changing its marketing, product offering and most importantly how it's recovering from a pandemic. For any island economy, air services are essential, and Fiji is one of the few destinations to have both a long-haul local airline and a mix of inbound international services.

\n","postSummaryRss":"

With the global recovery well underway it's noticeable how many destinations are adjusting their strategies and products to be more environmentally friendly and, of course, sustainable. 

In this episode, John Grant talks to Brent Hill, Chief Executive Officer at Tourism Fiji, about how the destination is changing its marketing, product offering and most importantly how it's recovering from a pandemic. For any island economy, air services are essential, and Fiji is one of the few destinations to have both a long-haul local airline and a mix of inbound international services.

","postTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"yYuRMJKM","previousPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Podcast/Featured%20Images/pascan-aviation.jpg","previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","previousPostName":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Julian Roberts, President and CEO at Pascan Aviation","previousPostSlug":"podcasts/julian-roberts-pascan","processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1656421440000,"publishDateLocalTime":1656421440000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1656421440000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":null},"publishImmediately":false,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1677858729600,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":47234281,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts/brent-hill-ceo-tourism-fiji","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

With the global recovery well underway it's noticeable how many destinations are adjusting their strategies and products to be more environmentally friendly and, of course, sustainable. 

In this episode, John Grant talks to Brent Hill, Chief Executive Officer at Tourism Fiji, about how the destination is changing its marketing, product offering and most importantly how it's recovering from a pandemic. For any island economy, air services are essential, and Fiji is one of the few destinations to have both a long-haul local airline and a mix of inbound international services.

\n\n
 
\n

\"Brent-Hill-Tourism-Fiji\"

\n

You can also listen here: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Stitcher, Tune In

\n

Or search for OAG On Air on your preferred podcast provider! 🎧

\n

Learn more about Aviation Sustainability here >>

\n
\n

Recommended:

\n

Flight Emissions Data: Powering Sustainable Aviation | Learn More

\n

Covid-19 Travel Recovery - Critical Aviation Data | View Now

\n

5 Travel Technologies You'll Hear More About In 2023

","rssSummary":"

With the global recovery well underway it's noticeable how many destinations are adjusting their strategies and products to be more environmentally friendly and, of course, sustainable. 

In this episode, John Grant talks to Brent Hill, Chief Executive Officer at Tourism Fiji, about how the destination is changing its marketing, product offering and most importantly how it's recovering from a pandemic. For any island economy, air services are essential, and Fiji is one of the few destinations to have both a long-haul local airline and a mix of inbound international services.

\n","rssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Fiji-Beach.jpg","scheduledUpdateDate":0,"screenshotPreviewTakenAt":1742399527355,"screenshotPreviewUrl":"https://cdn1.hubspot.net/hubshotv3/prod/e/0/87ebf75d-dcf2-4e68-bb61-e8541e18a6ed.png","sections":{},"securityState":"NONE","siteId":null,"slug":"podcasts/brent-hill-ceo-tourism-fiji","stagedFrom":null,"state":"PUBLISHED","stateWhenDeleted":null,"structuredContentPageType":null,"structuredContentType":null,"styleOverrideId":null,"subcategory":"normal_blog_post","syncedWithBlogRoot":true,"tagIds":[26961116215],"tagList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1584029721716,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":26961116215,"label":"COVID-19 Recovery","language":null,"name":"COVID-19 Recovery","portalId":490937,"slug":"covid-19-recovery","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1643209702875}],"tagNames":["COVID-19 Recovery"],"teamPerms":[],"templatePath":"","templatePathForRender":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","textToAudioFileId":null,"textToAudioGenerationRequestId":null,"themePath":null,"themeSettingsValues":null,"title":"On Air: in conversation with Brent Hill, CEO at Tourism Fiji","tmsId":null,"topicIds":[26961116215],"topicList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1584029721716,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":26961116215,"label":"COVID-19 Recovery","language":null,"name":"COVID-19 Recovery","portalId":490937,"slug":"covid-19-recovery","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1643209702875}],"topicNames":["COVID-19 Recovery"],"topics":[26961116215],"translatedContent":{},"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"tweet":null,"tweetAt":null,"tweetImmediately":false,"unpublishedAt":0,"updated":1677858729604,"updatedById":47234281,"upsizeFeaturedImage":false,"url":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts/brent-hill-ceo-tourism-fiji","useFeaturedImage":true,"userPerms":[],"views":null,"visibleToAll":null,"widgetContainers":{},"widgetcontainers":{},"widgets":{"module_1645507704457204":{"body":{"module_id":1155826,"value":"\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nComments:","widget_name":"Header"},"child_css":{},"css":{},"id":"module_1645507704457204","label":"Header","module_id":1155826,"name":"module_1645507704457204","order":7,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"}}},{"ab":false,"abStatus":null,"abTestId":null,"abVariation":false,"abVariationAutomated":false,"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts/campbell-wilson-scoot","afterPostBody":null,"aifeatures":null,"allowedSlugConflict":false,"analytics":null,"analyticsPageId":"71506049860","analyticsPageType":"blog-post","approvalStatus":null,"archived":false,"archivedAt":0,"archivedInDashboard":false,"areCommentsAllowed":true,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","author":null,"authorName":null,"authorUsername":null,"blogAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/www.oag.com/Images/OAG_John_Grant.jpg","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1475227847472,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"John Grant","email":"john.grant@oag.com","facebook":"","fullName":"John Grant","gravatarUrl":"https://app.hubspot.com/settings/avatar/b598c5e03482db185cd10238828b7984","hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":4384658544,"label":"John Grant","language":null,"linkedin":"https://uk.linkedin.com/in/john-grant-919a871a","name":"John Grant","portalId":490937,"slug":"john-grant","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"","twitterUsername":"","updated":1645440628109,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":""},"blogAuthorId":4384658544,"blogPostAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/www.oag.com/Images/OAG_John_Grant.jpg","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1475227847472,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"John Grant","email":"john.grant@oag.com","facebook":"","fullName":"John Grant","gravatarUrl":"https://app.hubspot.com/settings/avatar/b598c5e03482db185cd10238828b7984","hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":4384658544,"label":"John Grant","language":null,"linkedin":"https://uk.linkedin.com/in/john-grant-919a871a","name":"John Grant","portalId":490937,"slug":"john-grant","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"","twitterUsername":"","updated":1645440628109,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":""},"blogPostScheduleTaskUid":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailCampaignId":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailRetryCount":0,"blogPublishInstantEmailTaskUid":"DONE","blogPublishToSocialMediaTask":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blueprintTypeId":0,"businessUnitId":null,"campaign":"ed96c82e-c43a-4ea8-ac05-e61d095b1e21","campaignName":"Podcast","campaignUtm":"Podcast","category":3,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"checkPostLevelAudienceAccessFirst":true,"clonedFrom":65736381592,"composeBody":null,"compositionId":0,"contentAccessRuleIds":[],"contentAccessRuleTypes":[],"contentGroup":29502054281,"contentGroupId":29502054281,"contentTypeCategory":3,"contentTypeCategoryId":3,"contentTypeId":null,"created":1650458182627,"createdByAgent":null,"createdById":11440745,"createdTime":1650458182627,"crmObjectId":null,"css":{},"cssText":"","ctaClicks":null,"ctaViews":null,"currentState":"PUBLISHED","currentlyPublished":true,"deletedAt":0,"deletedBy":null,"deletedByEmail":null,"deletedById":null,"domain":"","dynamicPageDataSourceId":null,"dynamicPageDataSourceType":null,"dynamicPageHubDbTableId":null,"enableDomainStylesheets":null,"enableGoogleAmpOutputOverride":false,"enableLayoutStylesheets":null,"errors":[],"featuredImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Webinar_Featured_Images/Covid_and_Air_Travel_2.jpg","featuredImageAltText":"","featuredImageHeight":373,"featuredImageLength":0,"featuredImageWidth":822,"flexAreas":{},"folderId":null,"footerHtml":null,"freezeDate":1650885841263,"generateJsonLdEnabledOverride":true,"hasContentAccessRules":false,"hasUserChanges":true,"headHtml":null,"header":null,"htmlTitle":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Campbell Wilson, CEO at Scoot Airlines","id":71506049860,"includeDefaultCustomCss":null,"isCaptchaRequired":true,"isCrawlableByBots":false,"isDraft":false,"isInstanceLayoutPage":false,"isInstantEmailEnabled":true,"isPublished":true,"isSocialPublishingEnabled":false,"keywords":[],"label":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Campbell Wilson, CEO at Scoot Airlines","language":"en-gb","lastEditSessionId":null,"lastEditUpdateId":null,"layoutSections":{},"legacyBlogTabid":null,"legacyId":null,"legacyPostGuid":"","linkRelCanonicalUrl":null,"listTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","mab":false,"mabExperimentId":null,"mabMaster":false,"mabVariant":false,"meta":{"html_title":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Campbell Wilson, CEO at Scoot Airlines","public_access_rules":[],"public_access_rules_enabled":false,"post_body":"

On this episode of OAG On Air, Campbell Wilson - CEO at Scoot, a Singaporean low-cost airline - joins John Grant to discuss aviation's journey to recovery, his experiences and insights from a 26 year career with Singapore Airlines Group, how Scoot is responding as Asia reopens and the new opportunities that have arisen.

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

\n\n
 
\n

 

\n

\"OAG-On-Air-Podcast\"

\n

New call-to-action

","rss_summary":"

On this episode of OAG On Air, Campbell Wilson - CEO at Scoot, a Singaporean low-cost airline - joins John Grant to discuss aviation's journey to recovery, his experiences and insights from a 26 year career with Singapore Airlines Group, how Scoot is responding as Asia reopens and the new opportunities that have arisen.

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

\n","tag_ids":[26961116215],"topic_ids":[26961116215],"enable_google_amp_output_override":false,"generate_json_ld_enabled":true,"post_summary":"

On this episode of OAG On Air, Campbell Wilson - CEO at Scoot, a Singaporean low-cost airline - joins John Grant to discuss aviation's journey to recovery, his experiences and insights from a 26 year career with Singapore Airlines Group, how Scoot is responding as Asia reopens and the new opportunities that have arisen.

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

\n","blog_post_schedule_task_uid":null,"blog_publish_to_social_media_task":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blog_publish_instant_email_task_uid":"DONE","blog_publish_instant_email_campaign_id":null,"blog_publish_instant_email_retry_count":0,"rss_body":"

On this episode of OAG On Air, Campbell Wilson - CEO at Scoot, a Singaporean low-cost airline - joins John Grant to discuss aviation's journey to recovery, his experiences and insights from a 26 year career with Singapore Airlines Group, how Scoot is responding as Asia reopens and the new opportunities that have arisen.

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

\n\n
 
\n

 

\n

\"OAG-On-Air-Podcast\"

\n

New call-to-action

","keywords":[],"composition_id":0,"is_crawlable_by_bots":false,"use_featured_image":true,"published_at":1650885841263,"head_html":null,"footer_html":null,"attached_stylesheets":[],"enable_domain_stylesheets":null,"include_default_custom_css":null,"layout_sections":{},"past_mab_experiment_ids":[],"deleted_by":null,"featured_image_alt_text":"","enable_layout_stylesheets":null,"tweet":null,"tweet_at":null,"campaign_name":"Podcast","campaign_utm":"Podcast","meta_keywords":null,"meta_description":"On this episode of OAG On Air, John Grant is joined by CEO of Scoot, Campbell Wilson to discuss how aviation is recovering from the pandemic and more...","tweet_immediately":false,"publish_immediately":true,"security_state":"NONE","scheduled_update_date":0,"placement_guids":[],"property_for_dynamic_page_title":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_slug":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_meta_description":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_featured_image":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_canonical_url":null,"preview_image_src":null,"legacy_blog_tabid":null,"legacy_post_guid":"","performable_variation_letter":null,"style_override_id":null,"has_user_changes":true,"css":{},"css_text":"","unpublished_at":0,"published_by_id":11440745,"allowed_slug_conflict":false,"ai_features":null,"link_rel_canonical_url":null,"page_redirected":false,"page_expiry_enabled":false,"page_expiry_date":null,"page_expiry_redirect_id":null,"page_expiry_redirect_url":null,"deleted_by_id":null,"state_when_deleted":null,"cloned_from":65736381592,"staged_from":null,"personas":[],"compose_body":null,"featured_image":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Webinar_Featured_Images/Covid_and_Air_Travel_2.jpg","featured_image_width":822,"featured_image_height":373,"publish_timezone_offset":null,"theme_settings_values":null,"password":null,"header":null,"last_edit_session_id":null,"last_edit_update_id":null,"created_by_agent":null},"metaDescription":"On this episode of OAG On Air, John Grant is joined by CEO of Scoot, Campbell Wilson to discuss how aviation is recovering from the pandemic and more...","metaKeywords":null,"name":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Campbell Wilson, CEO at Scoot Airlines","nextPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Fiji-Beach.jpg","nextPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","nextPostName":"On Air: in conversation with Brent Hill, CEO at Tourism Fiji","nextPostSlug":"podcasts/brent-hill-ceo-tourism-fiji","pageExpiryDate":null,"pageExpiryEnabled":false,"pageExpiryRedirectId":null,"pageExpiryRedirectUrl":null,"pageRedirected":false,"pageTitle":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Campbell Wilson, CEO at Scoot Airlines","parentBlog":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts","allowComments":true,"ampBodyColor":"#404040","ampBodyFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampBodyFontSize":"18","ampCustomCss":"","ampHeaderBackgroundColor":"#ffffff","ampHeaderColor":"#1e1e1e","ampHeaderFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampHeaderFontSize":"36","ampLinkColor":"#416bb3","ampLogoAlt":"","ampLogoHeight":0,"ampLogoSrc":"","ampLogoWidth":0,"analyticsPageId":29502054281,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","businessUnitId":null,"captchaAfterDays":7,"captchaAlways":false,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"closeCommentsOlder":0,"commentDateFormat":"medium","commentFormGuid":"af838a2f-e845-4208-9c7b-dac50b10f26d","commentMaxThreadDepth":1,"commentModeration":false,"commentNotificationEmails":[],"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentVerificationText":"","cosObjectType":"BLOG","created":1589808702104,"createdDateTime":1589808702104,"dailyNotificationEmailId":null,"dateFormattingLanguage":null,"defaultGroupStyleId":"","defaultNotificationFromName":"","defaultNotificationReplyTo":"","deletedAt":0,"description":"Podcasts","domain":"","domainWhenPublished":"www.oag.com","emailApiSubscriptionId":9703393,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":true,"enableSocialAutoPublishing":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false,"header":null,"htmlFooter":"","htmlFooterIsShared":true,"htmlHead":"","htmlHeadIsShared":true,"htmlKeywords":[],"htmlTitle":"Podcasts","id":29502054281,"ilsSubscriptionListsByType":{"instant":3450},"instantNotificationEmailId":"78546156056","itemLayoutId":null,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"itemTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","label":"Podcasts","language":"en-gb","legacyGuid":null,"legacyModuleId":null,"legacyTabId":null,"listingLayoutId":null,"listingPageId":null,"listingTemplatePath":"oag-theme/templates/blog-index.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","monthFilterFormat":"MMMM yyyy","monthlyNotificationEmailId":null,"name":"Podcasts","parentBlogUpdateTaskId":null,"portalId":490937,"postHtmlFooter":"","postHtmlHead":"","postsPerListingPage":10000,"postsPerRssFeed":10,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publicTitle":"Podcasts","publishDateFormat":"dd MMMM yyyy","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","rootUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts","rssCustomFeed":null,"rssDescription":null,"rssItemFooter":null,"rssItemHeader":null,"settingsOverrides":{"itemLayoutId":false,"itemTemplatePath":false,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"listingLayoutId":false,"listingTemplatePath":false,"postsPerListingPage":false,"showSummaryInListing":false,"useFeaturedImageInSummary":false,"htmlHead":false,"postHtmlHead":false,"htmlHeadIsShared":false,"htmlFooter":false,"listingPageHtmlFooter":false,"postHtmlFooter":false,"htmlFooterIsShared":false,"attachedStylesheets":false,"postsPerRssFeed":false,"showSummaryInRss":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummariesInEmails":false,"allowComments":false,"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentModeration":false,"closeCommentsOlder":false,"commentNotificationEmails":false,"commentMaxThreadDepth":false,"commentVerificationText":false,"socialAccountTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"ampLogoSrc":false,"ampLogoHeight":false,"ampLogoWidth":false,"ampLogoAlt":false,"ampHeaderFont":false,"ampHeaderFontSize":false,"ampHeaderColor":false,"ampHeaderBackgroundColor":false,"ampBodyFont":false,"ampBodyFontSize":false,"ampBodyColor":false,"ampLinkColor":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false},"showSocialLinkFacebook":true,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":true,"showSocialLinkTwitter":true,"showSummaryInEmails":true,"showSummaryInListing":true,"showSummaryInRss":true,"siteId":null,"slug":"podcasts","socialAccountTwitter":"","state":null,"subscriptionContactsProperty":"blog_podcasts_29502054281_subscription","subscriptionEmailType":null,"subscriptionFormGuid":"a128cddf-a9c4-4184-86a8-5d03e7a95cc0","subscriptionListsByType":{"instant":5970},"title":null,"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1699002080096,"updatedDateTime":1699002080096,"urlBase":"www.oag.com/podcasts","urlSegments":{"all":"all","archive":"archive","author":"author","page":"page","tag":"tag"},"useFeaturedImageInSummary":true,"usesDefaultTemplate":false,"weeklyNotificationEmailId":null},"password":null,"pastMabExperimentIds":[],"performableGuid":null,"performableVariationLetter":null,"personalizationStrategyId":null,"personalizationVariantStatus":null,"personas":[],"placementGuids":[],"portableKey":null,"portalId":490937,"position":null,"postBody":"

On this episode of OAG On Air, Campbell Wilson - CEO at Scoot, a Singaporean low-cost airline - joins John Grant to discuss aviation's journey to recovery, his experiences and insights from a 26 year career with Singapore Airlines Group, how Scoot is responding as Asia reopens and the new opportunities that have arisen.

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

\n\n
 
\n

 

\n

\"OAG-On-Air-Podcast\"

\n

New call-to-action

","postBodyRss":"

On this episode of OAG On Air, Campbell Wilson - CEO at Scoot, a Singaporean low-cost airline - joins John Grant to discuss aviation's journey to recovery, his experiences and insights from a 26 year career with Singapore Airlines Group, how Scoot is responding as Asia reopens and the new opportunities that have arisen.

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

\n\n
 
\n

 

\n

\"OAG-On-Air-Podcast\"

\n

New call-to-action

","postEmailContent":"

On this episode of OAG On Air, Campbell Wilson - CEO at Scoot, a Singaporean low-cost airline - joins John Grant to discuss aviation's journey to recovery, his experiences and insights from a 26 year career with Singapore Airlines Group, how Scoot is responding as Asia reopens and the new opportunities that have arisen.

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Webinar_Featured_Images/Covid_and_Air_Travel_2.jpg","postListContent":"

On this episode of OAG On Air, Campbell Wilson - CEO at Scoot, a Singaporean low-cost airline - joins John Grant to discuss aviation's journey to recovery, his experiences and insights from a 26 year career with Singapore Airlines Group, how Scoot is responding as Asia reopens and the new opportunities that have arisen.

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Webinar_Featured_Images/Covid_and_Air_Travel_2.jpg","postRssContent":"

On this episode of OAG On Air, Campbell Wilson - CEO at Scoot, a Singaporean low-cost airline - joins John Grant to discuss aviation's journey to recovery, his experiences and insights from a 26 year career with Singapore Airlines Group, how Scoot is responding as Asia reopens and the new opportunities that have arisen.

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Webinar_Featured_Images/Covid_and_Air_Travel_2.jpg","postSummary":"

On this episode of OAG On Air, Campbell Wilson - CEO at Scoot, a Singaporean low-cost airline - joins John Grant to discuss aviation's journey to recovery, his experiences and insights from a 26 year career with Singapore Airlines Group, how Scoot is responding as Asia reopens and the new opportunities that have arisen.

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

\n","postSummaryRss":"

On this episode of OAG On Air, Campbell Wilson - CEO at Scoot, a Singaporean low-cost airline - joins John Grant to discuss aviation's journey to recovery, his experiences and insights from a 26 year career with Singapore Airlines Group, how Scoot is responding as Asia reopens and the new opportunities that have arisen.

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

","postTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"bviWCheH","previousPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Fiji-Beach.jpg","previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","previousPostName":"On Air: in conversation with Brent Hill, CEO at Tourism Fiji","previousPostSlug":"podcasts/brent-hill-ceo-tourism-fiji","processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1650885841000,"publishDateLocalTime":1650885841000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1650885841000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":null},"publishImmediately":true,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1650885841263,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":11440745,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts/campbell-wilson-scoot","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

On this episode of OAG On Air, Campbell Wilson - CEO at Scoot, a Singaporean low-cost airline - joins John Grant to discuss aviation's journey to recovery, his experiences and insights from a 26 year career with Singapore Airlines Group, how Scoot is responding as Asia reopens and the new opportunities that have arisen.

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

\n\n
 
\n

 

\n

\"OAG-On-Air-Podcast\"

\n

New call-to-action

","rssSummary":"

On this episode of OAG On Air, Campbell Wilson - CEO at Scoot, a Singaporean low-cost airline - joins John Grant to discuss aviation's journey to recovery, his experiences and insights from a 26 year career with Singapore Airlines Group, how Scoot is responding as Asia reopens and the new opportunities that have arisen.

Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

\n","rssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Webinar_Featured_Images/Covid_and_Air_Travel_2.jpg","scheduledUpdateDate":0,"screenshotPreviewTakenAt":1650885980330,"screenshotPreviewUrl":"https://cdn2.hubspot.net/hubshot/22/04/25/be08bf63-2e19-4ae8-9727-4fee5ba9ff36.png","sections":{},"securityState":"NONE","siteId":null,"slug":"podcasts/campbell-wilson-scoot","stagedFrom":null,"state":"PUBLISHED","stateWhenDeleted":null,"structuredContentPageType":null,"structuredContentType":null,"styleOverrideId":null,"subcategory":"normal_blog_post","syncedWithBlogRoot":true,"tagIds":[26961116215],"tagList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1584029721716,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":26961116215,"label":"COVID-19 Recovery","language":null,"name":"COVID-19 Recovery","portalId":490937,"slug":"covid-19-recovery","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1643209702875}],"tagNames":["COVID-19 Recovery"],"teamPerms":[],"templatePath":"","templatePathForRender":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","textToAudioFileId":null,"textToAudioGenerationRequestId":null,"themePath":null,"themeSettingsValues":null,"title":"OAG On Air: in conversation with Campbell Wilson, CEO at Scoot Airlines","tmsId":null,"topicIds":[26961116215],"topicList":[{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1584029721716,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":26961116215,"label":"COVID-19 Recovery","language":null,"name":"COVID-19 Recovery","portalId":490937,"slug":"covid-19-recovery","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1643209702875}],"topicNames":["COVID-19 Recovery"],"topics":[26961116215],"translatedContent":{},"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"tweet":null,"tweetAt":null,"tweetImmediately":false,"unpublishedAt":0,"updated":1650885841440,"updatedById":11440745,"upsizeFeaturedImage":false,"url":"https://www.oag.com/podcasts/campbell-wilson-scoot","useFeaturedImage":true,"userPerms":[],"views":null,"visibleToAll":null,"widgetContainers":{},"widgetcontainers":{},"widgets":{"module_1645507704457204":{"body":{"module_id":1155826,"value":"\n\n\n\nComments:","widget_name":"Header"},"child_css":{},"css":{},"id":"module_1645507704457204","label":"Header","module_id":1155826,"name":"module_1645507704457204","order":16,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"}}},{"ab":false,"abStatus":null,"abTestId":null,"abVariation":false,"abVariationAutomated":false,"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/reports/punctuality-league-2019","afterPostBody":null,"aifeatures":null,"allowedSlugConflict":false,"analytics":null,"analyticsPageId":"16967055363","analyticsPageType":"blog-post","approvalStatus":null,"archived":false,"archivedAt":0,"archivedInDashboard":false,"areCommentsAllowed":false,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","author":null,"authorName":null,"authorUsername":null,"blogAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Blog_Post_Images/blog-logo-2019.png","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1443609427809,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"OAG","email":"","facebook":"https://www.facebook.com/OAGAviation","fullName":"OAG","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":3347574604,"label":"OAG","language":null,"linkedin":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/oag","name":"OAG","portalId":490937,"slug":"oag","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"https://twitter.com/OAG_Aviation","twitterUsername":"@OAG_Aviation","updated":1548849836281,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":"http://www.oag.com"},"blogAuthorId":3347574604,"blogPostAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Blog_Post_Images/blog-logo-2019.png","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1443609427809,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"OAG","email":"","facebook":"https://www.facebook.com/OAGAviation","fullName":"OAG","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":true,"id":3347574604,"label":"OAG","language":null,"linkedin":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/oag","name":"OAG","portalId":490937,"slug":"oag","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"https://twitter.com/OAG_Aviation","twitterUsername":"@OAG_Aviation","updated":1548849836281,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":"http://www.oag.com"},"blogPostScheduleTaskUid":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailCampaignId":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailRetryCount":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailTaskUid":"DONE","blogPublishToSocialMediaTask":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blueprintTypeId":0,"businessUnitId":null,"campaign":"efb9a122-34d1-4a8c-8493-0b141d31bd2e","campaignName":"Punctuality League 2019","campaignUtm":"Punctuality%20League%202019","category":3,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"checkPostLevelAudienceAccessFirst":true,"clonedFrom":null,"composeBody":null,"compositionId":0,"contentAccessRuleIds":[],"contentAccessRuleTypes":[],"contentGroup":11927426090,"contentGroupId":11927426090,"contentTypeCategory":3,"contentTypeCategoryId":3,"contentTypeId":null,"created":1570116079073,"createdByAgent":null,"createdById":857021,"createdTime":1570116079073,"crmObjectId":null,"css":{},"cssText":"","ctaClicks":null,"ctaViews":null,"currentState":"PUBLISHED","currentlyPublished":true,"deletedAt":0,"deletedBy":null,"deletedByEmail":null,"deletedById":null,"domain":"","dynamicPageDataSourceId":null,"dynamicPageDataSourceType":null,"dynamicPageHubDbTableId":null,"enableDomainStylesheets":null,"enableGoogleAmpOutputOverride":false,"enableLayoutStylesheets":null,"errors":[],"featuredImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Free_Reports/Punctuality_League/2019/punctuality-league-book-transparent.png","featuredImageAltText":"punctuality-league-book-transparent","featuredImageHeight":0,"featuredImageLength":0,"featuredImageWidth":0,"flexAreas":{},"folderId":null,"footerHtml":null,"freezeDate":1546447680000,"generateJsonLdEnabledOverride":true,"hasContentAccessRules":false,"hasUserChanges":true,"headHtml":null,"header":null,"htmlTitle":"Flight Punctuality League 2019 | OAG","id":16967055363,"includeDefaultCustomCss":null,"isCaptchaRequired":true,"isCrawlableByBots":false,"isDraft":false,"isInstanceLayoutPage":false,"isInstantEmailEnabled":true,"isPublished":true,"isSocialPublishingEnabled":false,"keywords":[],"label":"Flight Punctuality League 2019 | OAG","language":"en-gb","lastEditSessionId":null,"lastEditUpdateId":null,"layoutSections":{},"legacyBlogTabid":null,"legacyId":null,"legacyPostGuid":null,"linkRelCanonicalUrl":null,"listTemplate":"generated_layouts/11927488622.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","mab":false,"mabExperimentId":null,"mabMaster":false,"mabVariant":false,"meta":{"html_title":"Flight Punctuality League 2019 | OAG","public_access_rules":[],"public_access_rules_enabled":false,"post_body":"

Another year, another look at on-time performance for the world's airlines and airports and 2019's edition makes for some very interesting analysis, especially as sitting on top of this year's league is a brand new winner in airline punctuality.

\n

Dethroning 3-time winner airBaltic was no easy task, but in 2018, Copa Airlines topped the ranking as the most punctual airline in the world with OTP of 89.79%, becoming the first-ever Latin American winner of the League.

\n

In fact, it's been a brilliant year for South America as LATAM Airlines Group came first in our Mega Airlines category with on-time performance of 85.60%, climbing a remarkable seven places and knocking Japan Airlines off top-spot. The success follows in our Medium Airports category as Panama City climbs from 3rd to 1st.

\n

We also welcome five new entrants in the Small Airports category, with Minsk going on to claim first place, but it is Japan which continues its excellent standards by winning the Large Airport and Mega Airport categories with Osaka and Tokyo Haneda respectively holding onto the top spots.

\n

With so many airlines and airports anticipating this report, it's no wonder the Punctuality League is being recognised as the world's definitive measurement of on-time performance. There's plenty of hot topics and discussions set to arise from these results, so make sure you're part of the action and download your very own copy using the form at the top of this page.

","rss_summary":"

Another year, another look at on-time performance for the world's airlines and airports and 2019's edition makes for some very interesting analysis, especially as sitting on top of this year's league is a brand new winner in airline punctuality.

\n","tag_ids":[6427971533,10257220318,15272518199],"topic_ids":[6427971533,10257220318,15272518199],"enable_google_amp_output_override":false,"generate_json_ld_enabled":true,"post_summary":"

Another year, another look at on-time performance for the world's airlines and airports and 2019's edition makes for some very interesting analysis, especially as sitting on top of this year's league is a brand new winner in airline punctuality.

\n","blog_post_schedule_task_uid":null,"blog_publish_to_social_media_task":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blog_publish_instant_email_task_uid":"DONE","blog_publish_instant_email_campaign_id":null,"blog_publish_instant_email_retry_count":null,"rss_body":"

Another year, another look at on-time performance for the world's airlines and airports and 2019's edition makes for some very interesting analysis, especially as sitting on top of this year's league is a brand new winner in airline punctuality.

\n

Dethroning 3-time winner airBaltic was no easy task, but in 2018, Copa Airlines topped the ranking as the most punctual airline in the world with OTP of 89.79%, becoming the first-ever Latin American winner of the League.

\n

In fact, it's been a brilliant year for South America as LATAM Airlines Group came first in our Mega Airlines category with on-time performance of 85.60%, climbing a remarkable seven places and knocking Japan Airlines off top-spot. The success follows in our Medium Airports category as Panama City climbs from 3rd to 1st.

\n

We also welcome five new entrants in the Small Airports category, with Minsk going on to claim first place, but it is Japan which continues its excellent standards by winning the Large Airport and Mega Airport categories with Osaka and Tokyo Haneda respectively holding onto the top spots.

\n

With so many airlines and airports anticipating this report, it's no wonder the Punctuality League is being recognised as the world's definitive measurement of on-time performance. There's plenty of hot topics and discussions set to arise from these results, so make sure you're part of the action and download your very own copy using the form at the top of this page.

","keywords":[],"composition_id":0,"is_crawlable_by_bots":false,"use_featured_image":true,"published_at":1613482562531,"head_html":null,"footer_html":null,"attached_stylesheets":[],"enable_domain_stylesheets":null,"include_default_custom_css":null,"layout_sections":{},"past_mab_experiment_ids":[],"deleted_by":null,"featured_image_alt_text":"punctuality-league-book-transparent","enable_layout_stylesheets":null,"tweet":null,"tweet_at":null,"campaign_name":"Punctuality League 2019","campaign_utm":"Punctuality%20League%202019","meta_keywords":null,"meta_description":"Congratulations to the winner of the Punctuality league 2019.","tweet_immediately":false,"publish_immediately":false,"security_state":"NONE","placement_guids":[],"property_for_dynamic_page_title":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_slug":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_meta_description":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_featured_image":null,"property_for_dynamic_page_canonical_url":null,"preview_image_src":null,"legacy_blog_tabid":null,"legacy_post_guid":null,"performable_variation_letter":null,"style_override_id":null,"has_user_changes":true,"css":{},"css_text":"","unpublished_at":0,"published_by_id":11440745,"allowed_slug_conflict":false,"ai_features":null,"link_rel_canonical_url":null,"page_redirected":false,"page_expiry_enabled":null,"page_expiry_date":null,"page_expiry_redirect_id":null,"page_expiry_redirect_url":null,"deleted_by_id":null,"state_when_deleted":null,"cloned_from":null,"staged_from":null,"personas":[],"compose_body":null,"featured_image":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Free_Reports/Punctuality_League/2019/punctuality-league-book-transparent.png","featured_image_width":0,"featured_image_height":0,"publish_timezone_offset":null,"theme_settings_values":null,"password":null,"header":null,"last_edit_session_id":null,"last_edit_update_id":null,"created_by_agent":null},"metaDescription":"Congratulations to the winner of the Punctuality league 2019.","metaKeywords":null,"name":"Flight Punctuality League 2019 | OAG","nextPostFeaturedImage":null,"nextPostFeaturedImageAltText":null,"nextPostName":null,"nextPostSlug":null,"pageExpiryDate":null,"pageExpiryEnabled":null,"pageExpiryRedirectId":null,"pageExpiryRedirectUrl":null,"pageRedirected":false,"pageTitle":"Flight Punctuality League 2019 | OAG","parentBlog":{"absoluteUrl":"https://www.oag.com/reports","allowComments":false,"ampBodyColor":"#404040","ampBodyFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampBodyFontSize":"18","ampCustomCss":"","ampHeaderBackgroundColor":"#ffffff","ampHeaderColor":"#1e1e1e","ampHeaderFont":"'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif","ampHeaderFontSize":"36","ampLinkColor":"#416bb3","ampLogoAlt":"","ampLogoHeight":0,"ampLogoSrc":"","ampLogoWidth":0,"analyticsPageId":11927426090,"attachedStylesheets":[],"audienceAccess":"PUBLIC","businessUnitId":null,"captchaAfterDays":7,"captchaAlways":false,"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"closeCommentsOlder":0,"commentDateFormat":"medium","commentFormGuid":"0817ebb1-fd33-4243-9f72-ff7e9214928b","commentMaxThreadDepth":1,"commentModeration":false,"commentNotificationEmails":[],"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentVerificationText":"","cosObjectType":"BLOG","created":1565182129075,"createdDateTime":1565182129075,"dailyNotificationEmailId":null,"dateFormattingLanguage":null,"defaultGroupStyleId":"","defaultNotificationFromName":"","defaultNotificationReplyTo":"","deletedAt":0,"description":"Regular aviation industry reports, whitepapers, market overviews and analysis.","domain":"","domainWhenPublished":"www.oag.com","emailApiSubscriptionId":7157010,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":true,"enableSocialAutoPublishing":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false,"header":null,"htmlFooter":"","htmlFooterIsShared":true,"htmlHead":"","htmlHeadIsShared":true,"htmlKeywords":[],"htmlTitle":"Reports","id":11927426090,"ilsSubscriptionListsByType":{"instant":3391},"instantNotificationEmailId":"12118113664","itemLayoutId":12090058697,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"itemTemplatePath":"generated_layouts/12090058697.html","label":"Reports","language":"en-gb","legacyGuid":null,"legacyModuleId":null,"legacyTabId":null,"listingLayoutId":11927488622,"listingPageId":null,"listingTemplatePath":"generated_layouts/11927488622.html","liveDomain":"www.oag.com","monthFilterFormat":"MMMM yyyy","monthlyNotificationEmailId":null,"name":"Reports","parentBlogUpdateTaskId":null,"portalId":490937,"postHtmlFooter":"","postHtmlHead":"","postsPerListingPage":13,"postsPerRssFeed":10,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publicTitle":"Reports","publishDateFormat":"dd MMMM yyyy","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","rootUrl":"https://www.oag.com/reports","rssCustomFeed":null,"rssDescription":null,"rssItemFooter":null,"rssItemHeader":null,"settingsOverrides":{"itemLayoutId":false,"itemTemplatePath":false,"itemTemplateIsShared":false,"listingLayoutId":false,"listingTemplatePath":false,"postsPerListingPage":false,"showSummaryInListing":false,"useFeaturedImageInSummary":false,"htmlHead":false,"postHtmlHead":false,"htmlHeadIsShared":false,"htmlFooter":false,"listingPageHtmlFooter":false,"postHtmlFooter":false,"htmlFooterIsShared":false,"attachedStylesheets":false,"postsPerRssFeed":false,"showSummaryInRss":false,"showSummaryInEmails":false,"showSummariesInEmails":false,"allowComments":false,"commentShouldCreateContact":false,"commentModeration":false,"closeCommentsOlder":false,"commentNotificationEmails":false,"commentMaxThreadDepth":false,"commentVerificationText":false,"socialAccountTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"enableGoogleAmpOutput":false,"ampLogoSrc":false,"ampLogoHeight":false,"ampLogoWidth":false,"ampLogoAlt":false,"ampHeaderFont":false,"ampHeaderFontSize":false,"ampHeaderColor":false,"ampHeaderBackgroundColor":false,"ampBodyFont":false,"ampBodyFontSize":false,"ampBodyColor":false,"ampLinkColor":false,"generateJsonLdEnabled":false},"showSocialLinkFacebook":false,"showSocialLinkLinkedin":false,"showSocialLinkTwitter":false,"showSummaryInEmails":true,"showSummaryInListing":true,"showSummaryInRss":true,"siteId":null,"slug":"reports","socialAccountTwitter":"","state":null,"subscriptionContactsProperty":"blog_reports_11927426090_subscription","subscriptionEmailType":null,"subscriptionFormGuid":"74ccb4f6-c77c-4ff4-8aee-32f04c2db999","subscriptionListsByType":{"instant":5668},"title":null,"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1691073474388,"updatedDateTime":1691073474388,"urlBase":"www.oag.com/reports","urlSegments":{"all":"all","archive":"archive","author":"author","page":"page","tag":"tag"},"useFeaturedImageInSummary":true,"usesDefaultTemplate":false,"weeklyNotificationEmailId":null},"password":null,"pastMabExperimentIds":[],"performableGuid":null,"performableVariationLetter":null,"personalizationStrategyId":null,"personalizationVariantStatus":null,"personas":[],"placementGuids":[],"portableKey":null,"portalId":490937,"position":null,"postBody":"

Another year, another look at on-time performance for the world's airlines and airports and 2019's edition makes for some very interesting analysis, especially as sitting on top of this year's league is a brand new winner in airline punctuality.

\n

Dethroning 3-time winner airBaltic was no easy task, but in 2018, Copa Airlines topped the ranking as the most punctual airline in the world with OTP of 89.79%, becoming the first-ever Latin American winner of the League.

\n

In fact, it's been a brilliant year for South America as LATAM Airlines Group came first in our Mega Airlines category with on-time performance of 85.60%, climbing a remarkable seven places and knocking Japan Airlines off top-spot. The success follows in our Medium Airports category as Panama City climbs from 3rd to 1st.

\n

We also welcome five new entrants in the Small Airports category, with Minsk going on to claim first place, but it is Japan which continues its excellent standards by winning the Large Airport and Mega Airport categories with Osaka and Tokyo Haneda respectively holding onto the top spots.

\n

With so many airlines and airports anticipating this report, it's no wonder the Punctuality League is being recognised as the world's definitive measurement of on-time performance. There's plenty of hot topics and discussions set to arise from these results, so make sure you're part of the action and download your very own copy using the form at the top of this page.

","postBodyRss":"

Another year, another look at on-time performance for the world's airlines and airports and 2019's edition makes for some very interesting analysis, especially as sitting on top of this year's league is a brand new winner in airline punctuality.

\n

Dethroning 3-time winner airBaltic was no easy task, but in 2018, Copa Airlines topped the ranking as the most punctual airline in the world with OTP of 89.79%, becoming the first-ever Latin American winner of the League.

\n

In fact, it's been a brilliant year for South America as LATAM Airlines Group came first in our Mega Airlines category with on-time performance of 85.60%, climbing a remarkable seven places and knocking Japan Airlines off top-spot. The success follows in our Medium Airports category as Panama City climbs from 3rd to 1st.

\n

We also welcome five new entrants in the Small Airports category, with Minsk going on to claim first place, but it is Japan which continues its excellent standards by winning the Large Airport and Mega Airport categories with Osaka and Tokyo Haneda respectively holding onto the top spots.

\n

With so many airlines and airports anticipating this report, it's no wonder the Punctuality League is being recognised as the world's definitive measurement of on-time performance. There's plenty of hot topics and discussions set to arise from these results, so make sure you're part of the action and download your very own copy using the form at the top of this page.

","postEmailContent":"

Another year, another look at on-time performance for the world's airlines and airports and 2019's edition makes for some very interesting analysis, especially as sitting on top of this year's league is a brand new winner in airline punctuality.

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Free_Reports/Punctuality_League/2019/punctuality-league-book-transparent.png","postListContent":"

Another year, another look at on-time performance for the world's airlines and airports and 2019's edition makes for some very interesting analysis, especially as sitting on top of this year's league is a brand new winner in airline punctuality.

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Free_Reports/Punctuality_League/2019/punctuality-league-book-transparent.png","postRssContent":"

Another year, another look at on-time performance for the world's airlines and airports and 2019's edition makes for some very interesting analysis, especially as sitting on top of this year's league is a brand new winner in airline punctuality.

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Free_Reports/Punctuality_League/2019/punctuality-league-book-transparent.png","postSummary":"

Another year, another look at on-time performance for the world's airlines and airports and 2019's edition makes for some very interesting analysis, especially as sitting on top of this year's league is a brand new winner in airline punctuality.

\n","postSummaryRss":"

Another year, another look at on-time performance for the world's airlines and airports and 2019's edition makes for some very interesting analysis, especially as sitting on top of this year's league is a brand new winner in airline punctuality.

","postTemplate":"generated_layouts/12090058697.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"EVrzUtxi","previousPostFeaturedImage":null,"previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":null,"previousPostName":null,"previousPostSlug":null,"processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1546447680000,"publishDateLocalTime":1546447680000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1546447680000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":null},"publishImmediately":false,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1613482562531,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":11440745,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/reports/punctuality-league-2019","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

Another year, another look at on-time performance for the world's airlines and airports and 2019's edition makes for some very interesting analysis, especially as sitting on top of this year's league is a brand new winner in airline punctuality.

\n

Dethroning 3-time winner airBaltic was no easy task, but in 2018, Copa Airlines topped the ranking as the most punctual airline in the world with OTP of 89.79%, becoming the first-ever Latin American winner of the League.

\n

In fact, it's been a brilliant year for South America as LATAM Airlines Group came first in our Mega Airlines category with on-time performance of 85.60%, climbing a remarkable seven places and knocking Japan Airlines off top-spot. The success follows in our Medium Airports category as Panama City climbs from 3rd to 1st.

\n

We also welcome five new entrants in the Small Airports category, with Minsk going on to claim first place, but it is Japan which continues its excellent standards by winning the Large Airport and Mega Airport categories with Osaka and Tokyo Haneda respectively holding onto the top spots.

\n

With so many airlines and airports anticipating this report, it's no wonder the Punctuality League is being recognised as the world's definitive measurement of on-time performance. There's plenty of hot topics and discussions set to arise from these results, so make sure you're part of the action and download your very own copy using the form at the top of this page.

","rssSummary":"

Another year, another look at on-time performance for the world's airlines and airports and 2019's edition makes for some very interesting analysis, especially as sitting on top of this year's league is a brand new winner in airline punctuality.

\n","rssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Free_Reports/Punctuality_League/2019/punctuality-league-book-transparent.png","scheduledUpdateDate":null,"screenshotPreviewTakenAt":1613482562684,"screenshotPreviewUrl":"https://cdn2.hubspot.net/hubshot/21/02/16/4fb505eb-d591-402d-9cb6-102669789a61.png","sections":{},"securityState":"NONE","siteId":null,"slug":"reports/punctuality-league-2019","stagedFrom":null,"state":"PUBLISHED","stateWhenDeleted":null,"structuredContentPageType":null,"structuredContentType":null,"styleOverrideId":null,"subcategory":"normal_blog_post","syncedWithBlogRoot":true,"tagIds":[6427971533,10257220318,15272518199],"tagList":[{"categoryId":0,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1541066330956,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":6427971533,"label":"Airports","language":null,"name":"Airports","portalId":490937,"slug":"airports","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1541066330957},{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1559828895308,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":10257220318,"label":"Airlines","language":null,"name":"Airlines","portalId":490937,"slug":"airlines","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1559828895308},{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1569936885187,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":15272518199,"label":"On-Time Performance","language":null,"name":"On-Time Performance","portalId":490937,"slug":"on-time-performance","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1569936885187}],"tagNames":["Airports","Airlines","On-Time Performance"],"teamPerms":[],"templatePath":"","templatePathForRender":"generated_layouts/12090058697.html","textToAudioFileId":null,"textToAudioGenerationRequestId":null,"themePath":null,"themeSettingsValues":null,"title":"Flight Punctuality League 2019 | OAG","tmsId":null,"topicIds":[6427971533,10257220318,15272518199],"topicList":[{"categoryId":0,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1541066330956,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":6427971533,"label":"Airports","language":null,"name":"Airports","portalId":490937,"slug":"airports","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1541066330957},{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1559828895308,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":10257220318,"label":"Airlines","language":null,"name":"Airlines","portalId":490937,"slug":"airlines","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1559828895308},{"categoryId":3,"cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"contentIds":[],"cosObjectType":"TAG","created":1569936885187,"deletedAt":0,"description":"","id":15272518199,"label":"On-Time Performance","language":null,"name":"On-Time Performance","portalId":490937,"slug":"on-time-performance","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"updated":1569936885187}],"topicNames":["Airports","Airlines","On-Time Performance"],"topics":[6427971533,10257220318,15272518199],"translatedContent":{},"translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"tweet":null,"tweetAt":null,"tweetImmediately":false,"unpublishedAt":0,"updated":1613482562538,"updatedById":11440745,"upsizeFeaturedImage":false,"url":"https://www.oag.com/reports/punctuality-league-2019","useFeaturedImage":true,"userPerms":[],"views":null,"visibleToAll":null,"widgetContainers":{},"widgetcontainers":{},"widgets":{"module_156622477044757":{"body":{"html":"

PUNCTUALITY LEAGUE 2019

","module_id":1155639,"widget_name":"Rich Text"},"child_css":{},"css":{},"id":"module_156622477044757","label":"H1","module_id":1155639,"name":"module_156622477044757","order":10,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"},"module_1566286637789192":{"body":{"form":{"form_id":"1aeaad47-316d-412c-959c-4dee3cd3716f","form_type":"HUBSPOT","gotowebinar_webinar_key":null,"message":"Thanks for submitting the form.","redirect_id":6902705494,"redirect_url":null,"response_type":"redirect"},"module_id":1155238,"title":"DOWNLOAD THE REPORT","widget_name":"Form"},"child_css":{},"css":{},"deleted_at":1613482235068,"id":"module_1566286637789192","label":"Form","module_id":1155238,"name":"module_1566286637789192","order":20,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"},"module_1566286652368194":{"body":{"definition_id":null,"extra_classes":"widget-type-rich_text","field_types":{"html":"richtext"},"html":"

Click here to view Privacy Notice

","module_id":1155639,"path":"@hubspot/rich_text","per_widget_wrapper_html":"","smart_objects":null,"smart_type":"NOT_SMART","tag":"module","type":"module","widget_name":"Rich Text","wrap_field_tag":"div","wrapping_html":""},"child_css":{},"css":{},"deleted_at":1613482235068,"id":"module_1566286652368194","label":"Rich Text","module_id":1155639,"name":"module_1566286652368194","order":22,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"},"module_1566286671560215":{"body":{"img":{"alt":"Punctuality League 2019","height":587,"max_height":587,"max_width":1181,"size_type":"exact","src":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Free_Reports/Punctuality_League/2019/punctuality-league-book-transparent.png","width":1181},"module_id":1155231,"widget_name":"Image"},"child_css":{},"css":{},"deleted_at":1613482235068,"id":"module_1566286671560215","label":"Image","module_id":1155231,"name":"module_1566286671560215","order":24,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"},"module_1566287630312466":{"body":{"definition_id":null,"extra_classes":"widget-type-social_sharing","facebook":{"enabled":true},"field_types":{"email":"group","facebook":"group","link":"text","linkedin":"group","pinterest":"group","twitter":"group"},"linkedin":{"enabled":true},"module_id":1155241,"path":"@hubspot/social_sharing","per_widget_wrapper_html":"","smart_objects":null,"smart_type":"NOT_SMART","tag":"module","twitter":{"enabled":true},"type":"module","widget_name":"Social Sharing","wrap_field_tag":"div","wrapping_html":""},"child_css":{},"css":{},"id":"module_1566287630312466","label":"Social Sharing","module_id":1155241,"name":"module_1566287630312466","order":17,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"},"module_1566287825554526":{"body":{"html":"","module_id":1155639,"widget_name":"Rich Text"},"child_css":{},"css":{},"deleted_at":1613482235068,"id":"module_1566287825554526","label":"Rich Text","module_id":1155639,"name":"module_1566287825554526","order":26,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"},"module_1566287882498558":{"body":{"form":{"form_id":"1aeaad47-316d-412c-959c-4dee3cd3716f","form_type":"HUBSPOT","gotowebinar_webinar_key":null,"message":"Thanks for submitting the form.","redirect_id":6902705494,"redirect_url":null,"response_type":"redirect"},"module_id":1155238,"widget_name":"Form"},"child_css":{},"css":{},"deleted_at":1613482235068,"id":"module_1566287882498558","label":"Form","module_id":1155238,"name":"module_1566287882498558","order":30,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"},"module_1566287922114561":{"body":{"definition_id":null,"extra_classes":"widget-type-header","field_types":{"header_tag":"choice","value":"text"},"header_tag":"h2","module_id":1155826,"path":"@hubspot/header","per_widget_wrapper_html":"","smart_objects":null,"smart_type":"NOT_SMART","tag":"module","type":"module","value":"Download the punctuality league 2019 now","widget_name":"Header","wrap_field_tag":"div","wrapping_html":""},"child_css":{},"css":{},"deleted_at":1613482235068,"id":"module_1566287922114561","label":"Header","module_id":1155826,"name":"module_1566287922114561","order":28,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"},"module_1566287929864563":{"body":{"definition_id":null,"extra_classes":"widget-type-rich_text","field_types":{"html":"richtext"},"html":"

Click here to view Privacy Notice

","module_id":1155639,"path":"@hubspot/rich_text","per_widget_wrapper_html":"","smart_objects":null,"smart_type":"NOT_SMART","tag":"module","type":"module","widget_name":"Rich Text","wrap_field_tag":"div","wrapping_html":""},"child_css":{},"css":{},"deleted_at":1613482235068,"id":"module_1566287929864563","label":"Rich Text","module_id":1155639,"name":"module_1566287929864563","order":32,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"},"module_156811330928065":{"body":{"html":"","module_id":1155639,"widget_name":"Rich Text"},"child_css":{},"css":{},"id":"module_156811330928065","label":"Rich Text","module_id":1155639,"name":"module_156811330928065","order":14,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"},"module_1568114027214255":{"body":{"html":"","module_id":1155639,"widget_name":"Rich Text"},"child_css":{},"css":{},"id":"module_1568114027214255","label":"H2","module_id":1155639,"name":"module_1568114027214255","order":12,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"},"module_156811783464383":{"body":{"img":{"alt":"Landing Page Hero Image","height":1080,"max_height":1080,"max_width":1920,"size_type":"exact","src":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Landing%20Page%20Hero%20Image.jpg","width":1920},"module_id":1155231,"widget_name":"Image"},"child_css":{},"css":{},"id":"module_156811783464383","label":"Image","module_id":1155231,"name":"module_156811783464383","order":8,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"},"module_160682439133281":{"body":{"form":{"form_id":"a9e6e29f-e4ef-4403-ab81-812e72326d80","form_type":"HUBSPOT","gotowebinar_webinar_key":null,"message":"Thanks for submitting the form.","redirect_id":6902705494,"redirect_url":null,"response_type":"redirect"},"title":"DOWNLOAD THE REPORT"},"child_css":{},"css":{},"id":"module_160682439133281","label":"Reports Form","module_id":38213628540,"name":"module_160682439133281","order":19,"smart_type":null,"styles":{},"type":"module"},"name":{"body":{"title":"Flight Punctuality League 2019 | OAG"},"id":"name","label":"Title","name":"name","type":"text"},"post_body":{"body":{"html":"

Another year, another look at on-time performance for the world's airlines and airports and 2019's edition makes for some very interesting analysis, especially as sitting on top of this year's league is a brand new winner in airline punctuality.

\n

Dethroning 3-time winner airBaltic was no easy task, but in 2018, Copa Airlines topped the ranking as the most punctual airline in the world with OTP of 89.79%, becoming the first-ever Latin American winner of the League.

\n

In fact, it's been a brilliant year for South America as LATAM Airlines Group came first in our Mega Airlines category with on-time performance of 85.60%, climbing a remarkable seven places and knocking Japan Airlines off top-spot. The success follows in our Medium Airports category as Panama City climbs from 3rd to 1st.

\n

We also welcome five new entrants in the Small Airports category, with Minsk going on to claim first place, but it is Japan which continues its excellent standards by winning the Large Airport and Mega Airport categories with Osaka and Tokyo Haneda respectively holding onto the top spots.

\n

With so many airlines and airports anticipating this report, it's no wonder the Punctuality League is being recognised as the world's definitive measurement of on-time performance. There's plenty of hot topics and discussions set to arise from these results, so make sure you're part of the action and download your very own copy using the form at the top of this page.

"},"deleted_at":1613482235068,"id":"post_body","label":"Blog Content","name":"post_body","type":"rich_text"}}}])