Aviation Industry Blog

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

John Grant

John Grant
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Recent Posts

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Latin America’s Airline Comeback: Is This Recovery Built to Last?

Few markets have experienced such turbulent growth in the aviation sector as ...

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Global Aviation’s Mid Term Report

It’s somehow always surprising to reach the mid-point of the year, but we are ...

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JetBlue’s Strategic Dilemma

The aviation industry can be the most unforgiving at times. Wafer thin margins ...

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How Airport Planning Teams Fill the Gaps of Flight Schedules

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Race Across The World by Air: Legacy vs Low-Cost

As the BBC’s popular Race Across The World reaches its final stage this week ...

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Transatlantic Air Travel Demand This Summer: Measure by ASKs or Seats?

As most legacy airlines have reported their first-quarter 2025 results, there ...

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Transatlantic Travel Holds Steady: Europe–US Capacity Flat, Airfares Dip Slightly

The big three US legacy airlines have published their first-quarter results, ...

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Has Long-Haul Low-Cost Finally Found Its Sweet Spot? How the Middle East and India Could Unlock Its Full Potential

The concept of long-haul low-cost airlines has been around for decades and in ...

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Aviation Reboot: China and India Revisit Air Travel Ties

China and India have recently begun discussions on restarting direct air ...

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Middle Eastern Airlines Shine in March On-Time Performance Highlights

In March 2025, 14 of the world's top airlines achieved an on-time performance ...

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Spain Basks In Another Strong Summer for Airlines

It looks like this summer will be the most successful yet for Europe’s airlines ...

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Canada - US Aviation: Airlines Respond to Weakening Demand

Airline capacity between Canada and the US has been reduced through to October ...

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North American Summer 2025 Schedules: Network and Capacity Changes

While the clocks have already sprung forward in North America, the IATA Summer ...

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Long-Haul Low-Cost Airlines: Why Can They Succeed in Some Markets but Fail in Others?

Is there a market for long-haul low-cost airlines? It’s a question that has ...

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Ukraine Aviation Market: Returning To Something Very Different

As we anticipate the reopening of scheduled services to Ukraine at some point ...

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Navigating January’s Challenges: Airline On-Time Performance Insights

Achieving a high level of on-time performance (OTP) is a complex task and ...

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The TAP Is Finally Turned On: TAP Air Portugal Sale Moves to Next Stage

It’s been on, off, on, off and finally looks like it’s on! 2025 will be the ...

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Air Travel Was The Only Bargain Ticket at Super Bowl LIX

The biggest sporting event in the United States also provides one of the ...

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European Airlines Set for a Confident Q1 2025 Amid Year-End and Early Financial Results

As a cluster of European airlines announce their year-end results, and a few ...

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IndiGo’s Perfect Long-Haul Low-Cost Position

The jury has been out on the potential for a sustainable long-haul low-cost ...

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GOL and Azul, a Merger of Necessity Or Choice?

Airline mergers and acquisitions seem to be just like London buses, nothing for ...

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Delta Air Lines Predicts Best Ever Year

It’s a brave call in the second week of the year and you have to admire the ...

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Aviation’s Longest Engagement - Time For a Korean Wedding

In November 2020 - while the pandemic wrecked the aviation sector - Korean Air ...

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The Nervous First Quarter; US Airlines’ Capacity Growth Disguises Key Adjustments

The first quarter of each year is always challenging for airlines in the ...

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Airline Industry 2025: Will Airfares Fall? Will Aircraft Production Problems Persist? Is Revenge Travel Spending Over?

Back in December 2023 we took a temperature read on the industry, summarising ...

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Spirit Airlines’ Constant Craving for Growth, What Went Wrong?

To most parts of the world Chapter 11 of the United States bankruptcy code is a ...

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Airline Capacity Grew 6.4% in 2024, But Could it Have Been Better?

It’s been a frustrating year for the aviation industry, so in this headline ...

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Mexico Bucks the Trend of Falling Airfares in Latin America

Airfares finally appear to be falling in markets around the world, as the last ...

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Summer 2024: Airfares Reduced as Capacity Increased on These European Flight Routes

As the IATA northern hemisphere winds down and airlines reflect upon a season ...

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The World of Connected Airports: Megahubs, Hubs and Niche Airports

Not all airports are the same, and in the world of large airports it’s common ...

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Low-Cost Carriers in The Aviation Industry: Where Next?

Low-cost carriers (LCCs) are an established and evolving part of the aviation ...

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

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

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China Expands International Network but will Demand Follow?

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

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CrowdStrike Travel Chaos: Airlines Struggling Back to Normal Operations

It’s hard enough running an airline at the best of times and maintaining ...

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Middle East Aviation: New Aircraft Orders

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

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Middle East Aviation: Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030

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

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Ethiopian Airlines Leaves Kenya Airways Behind

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

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Middle East Aviation: A Constantly Climbing Market

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

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Euro 2024: How The Top Travel Stats Line Up

The next big European football event, the UEFA European Football Championship, ...

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Scandinavia’s Star To Shine Less Brightly?

And so, what we all expected has been formalized and SAS Scandinavian Airlines ...

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Japan’s Slowly Rising Recovery: Swimming against a Tide of Adversity

Cast your minds back to 2019, a frequently referenced year as the pre-pandemic ...

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Why Is Average Flight Capacity Increasing at Its Fastest Rate Ever?

Things change slowly in the aviation industry and it’s very rare to see a “step ...

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Spring Capacity Points to a Full Travel Recovery

It’s finally over. The IATA Winter Season has just a few more days to run and ...

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Spain’s Hollow Domestic Flight Change: Regulatory Interference Highlights How Well Airlines Self-Regulate

Spain’s announcement of plans to switch domestic flights to rail services is ...

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Are Ryanair Proving That Domestic Services Can Work?

This week Ryanair released their Q3 financial results, and it was my turn for ...

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Have January's Cancellation Rates Dashed US Airlines' Hopes for the New Year?

Every airline and airport operations director starts the new year full of hope ...

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Turkish Airlines Adds Another Country to Their Network

An airline’s key marketing message is frequently built around the products ...

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Boeing’s New Year Wishes Blown Away Already

Every year Boeing’s executives hope that the next year will be better than the ...

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Navigating the Future of Air Travel: Insights for 2024

In the ever-evolving realm of air travel, the coming year holds a multitude of ...

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Edinburgh Airport: January Sales Arrive Early

It’s been rumoured for quite some time, but as an early seasonal present to the ...

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The First and Last Flights of the Year

Aviation never rests, there are always scheduled services in the sky carrying ...

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Where Is Santa In December? His Secret Hideaway Is Hidden In The Flight Data

Data always points you in the way of valuable insights, and as the year comes ...

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Aviation Leaders Discuss 2024 Challenges

Against the backdrop of the Dubai Air Show and COP28, the aviation industry’s ...

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A Marginal Improvement In Thanksgiving Punctuality Is An Achievement To Celebrate

As the dust settles on the latest seasonal holiday and attention switches to ...

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LCCs' Domestic Capacity Share Grows in the US

At times, change can occur gradually, slowly evolving over time. It often ...

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Peaks and Lows in Thanksgiving Demand Cause Operational Challenges for US Airlines

The next week will see US Airlines come under tremendous pressure as the rush ...

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Tracking the Evolution of Airlines: 2019-2023

In 2019, 256 new airlines entered the industry (listing scheduled capacity for ...

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The World's Smallest Aviation Markets

In the global aviation market, we often talk about the largest, the longest and ...

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Europe: The Frustrations of a Hub Airport

Commercial aviation is dominated by a series of hub airports where passengers ...

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Australia: When a Fair Share Isn’t Quite Fair!

Aviation is a regulated industry, and however much we like to think otherwise, ...

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Africa: When the Crossroads Get Closed

We’ve all been there, you are in a rush to get somewhere and suddenly hit a ...

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Capacity Discipline In The US Market Relaxes

One of the notable features of the market post pandemic has been the high ...

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Matching Supply to Demand: The Art of Successful Management

It’s a very simple equation, match supply to demand or indeed keep supply a ...

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A Productive Q2 2023 For The Airline Industry: Interpreting The Data

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Are Travel Codes About To Get More Complex?

In the good old days of travel, when flights departed on time and there were no ...

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Ryanair Adds 28% More Seats Vs July 2019, Busiest Day For Capacity Set For 10th August

The pandemic made airlines constantly reevaluate and pivot their strategies, ...

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Peak Summer Airline Capacity but Mind the Gaps!

As the summer season reaches its peak over the next few weeks it seems that the ...

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US Travel Disruption: Lucky Escape for Some, but Not United Airlines and JetBlue

The last few weeks have created a perfect summer storm for the US majors as a ...

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An Unforgettable Week in Paris

An iconic destination and hot weather - it must be the week of the Paris Air ...

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Transatlantic Bounce Back Becomes a Boing!

Western Europe to the United States of America was one of the first long-haul ...

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French Short-haul Flight ‘Ban’ Follows Already Established Trend

The law of unintended consequences seems to impact the airline industry more ...

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The Changing Picture of Long-Haul Travel

It seems like the pandemic is finally behind us and that aviation is returning ...

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Formula One Science in Aircraft Turnarounds

Every Second (or Minute) Literally Counts Two point one seconds, the fastest ...

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Central Asia’s Rapid Travel Recovery

When you have the whole world to look at - and masses of data at your ...

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The World’s Most Heavily Used Aircraft Types - Answering The Big ASK

It appears that people are obsessed with measuring airlines. From the quality ...

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African Aviation – Another Set of Crossroads

The World Cup is now a distant memory, and the success of Morocco was a great ...

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Stretching Non-Stop Flights to the Limit

Attention is already turning to next year for the people working on Project ...

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Pilot Shortages Likely to Frustrate Airline Growth and Travelers Will Pay the Price in Airfares

Every day we seem to hear of shortages: tomatoes, electricity, micro-chips, and ...

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Will IAG TAP Into a New Opportunity?

In this article, John Grant discusses the possible sale of ITA Airways and the ...

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The Clue Is in the Name for Virgin Atlantic’s Route Network Strategy

The Virgin brand has always been different, a global phenomenon full of amazing ...

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The Worth of Heathrow’s Slots: Europe’s Most Valuable Airport Highlights Market Recovery

There are some established indicators of how confident the airline industry is ...

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EasyJet Rebuilds: Better Than Expected Results Raise Wider Industry Optimism

It’s not been an easy recovery for easyJet. While the market recovery in Europe ...

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Air India Tidies Up in London

London Gatwick Benefits With New Services India is hot, to state the obvious, ...

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China’s International Reopening: More of a Slow Burner Than a Game Changer

The news that China removed quarantine requirements for inbound travelers and ...

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New Year, New Hope, Despite Challenges Ahead in 2023

A new year is here and hopefully the travel recovery will continue through the ...

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An Overview of Airline Capacity as the Travel Recovery Continues

This week we are going to take a look at total airline capacity across the ...

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Airports See a Ten-Fold Increase in Flight Cancellations as Snow Hits Europe

China is back! Well at least for this week, which highlights how quickly ...

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Airline Alliances…Time To Change Partners?

There has never been a period of such capacity change as we have seen during ...

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Seat Capacity Set to Finish 31% Up on 2021 & France's Short-Haul Own Goal Gives Hope to England

Judging by the way that airlines are moving capacity up and down over the next ...

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US Airlines Deliver a Punctual Thanksgiving for Travelers

Airline Capacity Rises Above 90 Million Again Global airline capacity has once ...

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US Airlines Cut One Million Seats for Thanksgiving

The dizzy heights of summer when global capacity was over 100 million seats a ...

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Keep it Quiet...Has the Airline Industry Finally Stabilised?

It may seem like a quiet period for the aviation industry with global airline ...

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North America Full Travel Recovery Within Touching Distance

Returning to work after a two-week holiday and it’s good to know that at least ...

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2022 Scheduled Airline Capacity Predicted to Reach 87% of 2019 Level

As the second quarter financial results for airlines begin to be finalised, for ...

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Chinese Airline Capacity Bounces Back ... The Rest of the World Enjoys a Week of Stability

Global airline capacity has bounced back as a combination of both lockdowns in ...

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Unique Opportunities for Airlines and Airports Ahead of the 2022 FIFA World Cup

And the World Cup Winner 2022 is...Dubai! The final pre-tournament matches have ...

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Central Asia Outperforms Its Pre-Pandemic Levels

Global airline capacity continues its steady descent, having passed back ...

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A Good News Week In Asia As More Markets Open... But Cancellation Rates for Some Are Edging Up

Three pieces of good news broke in Asia last week that, although not providing ...

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A Quiet Reflective Week of Capacity Changes - Aviation Boost in North East Asia as Japan Reopens

The latest reopening of some commercial centres in China has resulted in a ...

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Recovery in Most Regions Continues, Airline Capacity Below 100 Million Due to Latest Lockdown in China

After the summer season of 100 million seats plus a week, global airline ...

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British Airways Remove Half a Million Seats from Q4

Is This the Last Week of 100 Million Weekly Scheduled Seats? Although global ...

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Airlines Increasingly Cautious About Winter Season

Another week of more than 102 million scheduled seats makes this the eighth ...

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Western Europe Becomes Largest Regional Market

There are some interesting movements in the weekly capacity update from OAG, ...

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UK Cancellation Rates Fall and India is Fastest Growing Market

One thing we learned throughout the pandemic is that when you think things are ...

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The A380 Returns: An Aircraft of Opportunity or Necessity?

In the week when the last A380 was delivered to Emirates, it seemed an ...

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Capacity is Coming Home as Latest Cancellation Rates Prove a Mixed Bag

A modest half a million more seats week on week once again takes global ...

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South East Asia Bounces Back as Airline Cancellation Rates Continue To Fall in Europe

For the second consecutive week, global airline capacity has eased back with a ...

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Are Flight Cancellation Rates Improving as the Holiday Season Starts?

Despite some airports capping airline capacity without consultation in the last ...

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Airlines Face Half Billion Revenue Gap as London Heathrow Restricts Capacity

It came as no surprise that London Heathrow would have to take action on the ...

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Cancellations Settling Across Europe as Airline Capacity Cuts Kick In

Confidence Building in China With Airbus Order This week saw several airlines ...

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100 Million Seats Mark Finally Broken

Airlines Continue to Rebuild Capacity For the first time since January 2019, ...

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The Airbus A380 Gets Ready To Roll Out Again and Capacity Edges to 100 Million

This week’s airline capacity has settled at 99.9 million seats - so close and ...

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North East Asia Sees Growth as China Adds Seats

As temperatures continue to soar in Europe, airline capacity has followed ...

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100 Million Seats a Week by Mid-July

Rather like an English batsman stuck in the nervous nineties, global airline ...

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Airport Slots... The Value of Nothing!

For something that does not physically exist airport slots receive a lot of ...

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Western Europe Becomes the Largest Market in the World

It has been a disappointing week for global airline capacity as total seats ...

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London Heathrow is the World’s Busiest International Airport This Week

Total scheduled airline seats this week remains above the 90 million mark, a ...

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12 August Set Up as Busiest Day for Airline Capacity

As We Hit 90 Million Seats… Shortages Create an Ongoing Challenge

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Qantas Unveils Record-Breaking Project Sunrise Flights As Travel Recovery Gathers More Pace

It all happened at the weekend. Qantas finally confirmed Project Sunrise with a ...

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More Restriction-Free Travel Destinations Join the Path to Recovery

Chinese Airline Capacity Begins to Rebuild As travel restrictions continue to ...

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Positive Developments for the Aviation Industry & Global Airline Capacity Edges Closer to 90 Million

Last week we reported on a challenging week for the aviation industry as ...

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A Bumpy Week for Aviation as Resource Shortages Impact Travel

It was never going to be a straightforward recovery from the global pandemic ...

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When Opposites Attract - A Spirited Approach from JetBlue

They say opposites attract and if that is the case, then this week’s approach ...

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European Airlines Lead First Quarter Recovery: Three Regions Now Above 2019 Capacity Levels

As we finish the first quarter of the year, global capacity has remained above ...

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Transatlantic Travel Recovery Gathers Pace - American Airlines Bookings Lead the Way

Tracking airline capacity has, for a long time, been the best measure of what ...

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Airlines Spring Back Into Action - The Good, Bad and Ugly Parts of the Air Travel Recovery…

The first week of the season is like a typical April day, a bit of sunshine, ...

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The Last Week of Winter: Forward Airline Capacity Looks Bright and Forward Travel Bookings Look Even Brighter…

As another Northern Hemisphere Winter Season draws to a close, this week’s ...

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Global Airline Capacity Continues Its Recovery

Two years ago, global airline capacity fell off a cliff; 21 million seats were ...

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Global Airline Capacity Overview

These are challenging times for the world and there are more important ...

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Ukraine Crisis Brings More Challenges for Airlines Despite Global Recovery Signs

The last week’s events in Europe have been deeply concerning for an industry ...

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Russia Closes its Aviation Borders: Affected Airlines will Find Alternatives

The escalation of events in the Ukraine are a tragic development at all levels ...

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London Heathrow and the Problem of Not Being Able To Move

It’s been a very tough few years for the whole aviation industry and much of ...

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Major European Markets Double in Size as Storm Eunice Hits

The last two years have challenged the airline industry in so many different ...

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Low-Cost Carriers in Pole Position - How Adversity Has Led to Opportunity

One of the lessons from the global pandemic was never to miss an opportunity in ...

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Frontier & Spirit Airlines Proposed Merger Makes Them A Top 10 Carrier

We’ve been here before but breaking through the 80 million mark this week is ...

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Olympian Capacity Recovery in China Takes Gold

Increasing Signs of Recovery in All Markets Global airline capacity has bounced ...

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Ryanair and EasyJet Bring Back Significant Capacity in Europe

Global Capacity Melts As China Prepares For Winter Olympics In normal times ...

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Two Years On: Hope Is Omicron Impact Has Bottomed Out, as Brighter April Looms

Every week for the last two years we have been providing a weekly update on the ...

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The Price of On-time Performance, Are We Willing To Pay the Price?

The last two years have been awful for the whole travel and tourism industry ...

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33 Million Seats Dropped in Two Weeks

Airline capacity continues to fall as Omicron spreads with 33 million seats now ...

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January Aftershock: Airline Market Continues to Weather Omicron

Global airline capacity has fallen this week as the impact of travel ...

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2021 Global Airline Capacity Finished at 5.7 Billion, 35% Down on Pre-COVID Levels

The devil really is in the data this week, or to be more precise it is behind ...

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Capacity Grows Again this Week as a Final Present for the Year and Quarter One 2022 is not Looking too Bad… Yet!

It feels a bit like Groundhog Day, or perhaps week or IATA season, as we close ...

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Mixed Messages Ahead of the Seasonal Holidays

On the face of it, the data looks slightly positive this week with capacity ...

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Airline Capacity Remains Stable as Omicron Provokes Hasty Responses From Governments

Despite the best attempts of the latest Covid-19 variant 'Omicron', and a ...

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U.S Airlines Recovery – the highs & lows of meeting demand

Does Network Stability Equal Network Profitability? Covid-19 has stretched the ...

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No Significant Impact From Omicron Variant on Scheduled Flights To Report...

Network Planning as Usual for Airlines ... At Least for Now It was always going ...

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New Covid Variant 'Omicron': Airline Stocks Impacted but no Need for Panic

The overnight news of a new covid variant of concern, Omicron, discovered by ...

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China’s US$20 Billion Hold on Asian Aviation - Continued Lockdowns Now Stalling Any Recovery

The great aviation recovery is underway, or more precisely - airline capacity ...

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Global Airline Capacity Becomes Becalmed Ahead of Thanksgiving

If last week was busy with IATA Slot, the Dubai Air Show and new aircraft ...

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New Aircraft Orders and Borders Reopening, But Global Airline Capacity Remains Flat, At Least For Now...

A busy week for the aviation industry sees the good and great meeting at the ...

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Thanksgiving Gifts as Airline Recovery Continues

US Airlines have a major role to play at Thanksgiving transporting literally ...

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The World’s Richest Market Finally Reopens!

A Welcome Injection of US$ 2.8 Billion For Transatlantic Carriers After more ...

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Winter Brings Good News With Markets Reopening and New Routes Starting!

As the IATA Winter Season starts there is plenty of good news around the globe ...

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Tracking the Aviation Recovery: Summer Is Over and the Winter Looks Much Better

The last week of the 2021 summer season brings the usual mix of changes in ...

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Positivity Soars as Travel Markets Reopen but Airlines Remain Cautious

It seems that everything is positive for the aviation industry this week as ...

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Increasing Positivity Around the Globe as Key Indicators Improve

The last seven days have felt like things are beginning to get back to some ...

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Airline Capacity Grows to Year End as Confidence Rebuilds

As the IAGA AGM commences today, there is an increasing feeling that the global ...

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Scheduled Airlines Respond to the Reopening of the Transatlantic Market

The Transatlantic Aviation Market Reopens in November and Scheduled Airlines ...

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British Airways Abandons Short Haul Hopes at London Gatwick

Common Sense Prevails in London...at Last! No, not the reopening of the US ...

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Christmas Comes Early for Airline CEOs

Finally, good news for every scheduled airline CEO in Europe and the United ...

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Business Air Travel Remains the Key Factor to the Year End

Airline Capacity Continues Towards a Soft Landing The slow, but now steady, ...

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Global Airline Capacity Expected to Increase by Less Than 15% in 2021

Global Airline Capacity Unlikely to Reach Pre-Pandemic Levels Before 2023 at ...

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Airline Capacity Softens Around the World

Africa’s ‘Lego’ Airline Proves Unbreakable It is only September, but the ...

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Airlines Hopes of US$160 Billion Revenue Injection Lost in August

Peeking over the wall to the end of the year tells you all you need to know ...

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Airlines Expectations for any Recovery in 2021 are Fading

Modest Weekly Growth Hides Longer-Term Trends The ups and downs of aviation’s ...

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US Airlines Steal An Advantage Over Competitors

Financial Impact of the One-Way Road It’s fair to say that the airline industry ...

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Aviation’s Recovery Stutters Once Again

Capacity Remains Trapped As Major Markets Remain Closed.

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Airlines Are Heading for a US $48 Billion Loss or Worse This Year

Global Capacity Gets Flushed Away…Again Last week’s marginal reductions in ...

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Global Aviation Stuck in Suspended Animation

Will Hero Joe Come to the Rescue? Marginal reductions in global capacity this ...

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Airlines Likely to Lose Over US$8 Billion Of Transatlantic Revenues

Global Capacity Descends Again… Global capacity once again slipped back week on ...

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North American Fleet Orders - Marginal Gains For Long Term Revenues

The aviation recovery is underway, well it is in some parts of the world and ...

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Airlines Break Through 80 Million Seats A Week

Olympics 2021 Lead To A Sprint In Japanese Airline Capacity This is ...

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Global Airline Capacity Fails To Break The 80 Million Mark

Capacity settles at 79.8 million, a slight increase on last week of 1.5% with ...

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An Encouraging Week for Many Airlines - Then A Bubble Burst and an Outbreak Occurs

This week’s data highlights once again just how frustrating and different every ...

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Airlines Add Back Another 3.1 Million Seats This Week

The challenges of the airline industry are captured in this week’s data; ...

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Airline Capacity Continues to Grow In the Short Term

But 21.4 Million More Seats Removed From June to September Inventory Rather ...

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Capacity Grows But Airlines Fail Over The Weekend

Industry Breaks Through 70 million Capacity Per Week The airline industry has ...

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Transatlantic Travel Trauma

US$ 5.4 Billion Of Revenue Risk For Major Airlines In a normal year, this is ...

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Airline Capacity Steadies Before Another Likely Tumble

Since last week saw some of the fastest capacity growth since January 2020, we ...

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Airline Capacity Bounces Back In Europe & The United States Reclaims First Position

Following last week’s lack of activity, airlines have been adding capacity back ...

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Managing Fleet Recoveries in a Pandemic, Ryanair Wins Again!

We all want to get back to normal, business travellers flying around the globe ...

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Airline Capacity Stalls As We Head Into The Summer Season

80% of the World’s Largest International Markets Remain at Less Than 10% of ...

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Airlines Flying Close to the Sun

Domestic Airline Capacity Heats Up This Summer As The Market Changes It is an ...

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It's Green for Go! UK Reopens for International Flights but to Where?

The UK’s Green List for Travel Polite words and phrases such as “a step in the ...

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Is this the Beginning of the Aviation Recovery?

Ryanair announces a US$989 million loss and apparently, things are getting ...

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Slim Pickings for European Travel as Loosening Restrictions Fail to Deliver for Airlines

Although global capacity remains broadly flat week-on-week with some 62.1 ...

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Following the Paper Trail to Ticketless Travel and Travel Technology

It is the most important part of travel, but probably the only thing that you ...

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Airlines Eagerly Await Traffic Light Travel Announcement

Airlines Eagerly Awaiting Traffic Lights to Arrive, Will This Be The ...

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Is the US Aviation Market In Recovery? Airlines Experiment with New Network Strategies

Domestic airline capacity, and TSA volumes, a proxy for flight demand have ...

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Airlines Add More Capacity This Week & Capacity is Much Stronger Than This Time Last Year

The headline numbers suggest that global airline capacity has seen a slight ...

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Aviation Hops Towards A Recovery in Some Places But Global Airline Capacity Falls Again

It's only 40,000 seats in each direction, or just 0.065% of global airline ...

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Aviation’s Maddest Week of News - Airline Capacity Shrinks Too

Even by aviation’s normal standards, it has been a strange week. At the same ...

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Airlines Continue to Add Back Capacity - Eight Consecutive Weeks of Capacity Growth

The eighth consecutive week of capacity growth takes us to 63.2 million seats a ...

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Summer Travel Airline Capacity Bounces Back

Summer Season Travel Airline Capacity Begins to Bounce Back & US Airlines ...

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Mixed Messages in A Week of Capacity Changes and United Airlines Make Dramatic Transatlantic Capacity Cuts for Q3

It feels like it has been a busy week in terms of airline activity. Capacity ...

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Airline Capacity Continues to Climb Like An A340…Slowly But Surely US Capacity Races Ahead of TSA Checkpoint Volumes

Another one million additional seats added back week-on-week, carry on at this ...

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The Power of Connecting Passengers - Later Guest Arrivals to Become The New Normal

If you have ever sat on a plane wondering where the person sitting next to you ...

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Confidence Continues to Build as Weekly Capacity Increases

Optimism continues to build in the recovery with weekly capacity increasing ...

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Optimism Breaks Out Around the World, Very Large Airline Capacity Increases Shaping Up from May

Optimism breaks out around the world as the capacity recovery is underway! Four ...

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Joining The Dots But Missing The “T’s” Socially Distancing Whilst Connecting, A Complex Issue

There is growing optimism around an aviation recovery; in the UK it’s almost ...

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Network Planners Take A Well-Deserved Break

It has been a very quiet week for global flight capacity with one of the ...

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China Springs Back and American Airlines are Back at Number One

It was only ever likely to be for a week, but China has snatched back the title ...

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Chinese Domestic Capacity Collapses with Record Reductions

Wow, where did that come from! A near 27% reduction in capacity and the loss of ...

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Industry Heads For Half A Billion Fewer Seats in Quarter One

Finally it’s over, we mean January not Covid-19 and the airline industry can ...

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easyJet and Ryanair Share The Capacity Pain While China and The United States Lead The World

Another dire week for global aviation with more lockdowns, sudden suspensions ...

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Twelve Months on and it's Getting Worse

Fifty-two weeks ago, we wrote a short blog highlighting some of the regional ...

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Europe's Low-Cost Carriers Summer Shuffle

Fed up with looking back at 2020 data we’ve sneaked a peek forward at how some ...

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Global Capacity Likely to Be Cut by Around 350 Million in Next Few Weeks

Plus it's carnage in Europe as one quarter of capacity lost in a week. It is ...

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2021 Capacity Starts Slowly - Can We Close Our Eyes For A Few Months Please

The flattest seasonal holiday season has been reflected in the latest global ...

Blog

2021 Aviation’s Year of Recovery- Get Ready To Enjoy A Remarkable Year of Growth

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OAG Coronavirus Update – Week Thirty Have We Just Peaked?

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OAG Coronavirus Update – Week Twenty-Nine Sixty Million Mark Reached, Halfway Back - But Only Just

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OAG Coronavirus Update – Week Twenty Five Capacity Edges Forward Towards 50 Million

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OAG Coronavirus Update – Week Twenty One Look to the SouthWest For Capacity Growth

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OAG Coronavirus Update – Week Twenty Nearly Sixty Airlines Relaunch Services This Week

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OAG Coronavirus Update – Week Eighteen Weekly Capacity Grows At One Of The Fastest Rates Ever

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OAG Coronavirus Update – Week Fourteen Capacity Cuts Slow But Now Below 30 Million Seats Per Week

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OAG Coronavirus Update – Week Thirteen Chinese Domestic Capacity Grows Again but Global Capacity Falls

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Coronavirus Update Week Twelve - Below Forty Million and Counting

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Coronavirus Update Week Eleven- 30% of Global Capacity Wiped Out in One Week

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Coronavirus Update Week Ten- Single Largest Ever Capacity Reductions in One Week

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Coronavirus Capacity Update Week Nine The Changes Keep on Coming

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Coronavirus Capacity Update Week Eight

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

\n

In infrastructure terms, Tokyo Haneda Airport can handle approximately 90 million passengers annually. In 2024, it came close to that threshold, handling 85 million passengers. When looking at seat capacity - the number of airline seats filled by carriers from each airport – Tokyo Haneda is the only large Asian airport to have surpassed 100 million seats. However, Shanghai Pudong, Beijing Capital, and Delhi are all close behind with between 90-95 million scheduled airline seats in 2024.

\n
\n\n

Which airports could join the 100 million club?

\n

Here are some of the projects currently underway that aim to enable Asia’s largest airports to handle over 100 million passengers annually and join the 100 Million Club, most likely in the next decade:

\n

Changi Airport (Singapore) Terminal 5:

\n\n

Hong Kong International Airport:

\n\n

Suvarnabhumi Airport (Bangkok):

\n\n

Incheon International Airport (Seoul):

\n\n

Long Thanh International Airport (Ho Chi Minh City):

\n\n

Philippines (Greater Manila region):

\n\n

Other notable, significant airport development projects across Asia include:

\n\n

Several of the key airport projects are also strategic investments in Megahubs, with countries positioning their airports as regional or global transfer hubs, which encourages scale. Singapore, Bangkok Suvarnabhumi, Incheon, and Hong Kong are all expanding to attract global long-haul and intercontinental transfers, and the New Manila Airport is designed to compete with regional giants in Kuala Lumpur and Singapore Changi.

\n

MEGAHUBS 2024   Discover the definitive ranking of the world's most connected airports.  

\n

Another key factor is replacing or supplementing capacity-constrained airports. Some major cities are landlocked or have outdated infrastructure:

\n\n

Asian governments see these aviation hubs as catalysts for foreign and domestic investment, tourism, and employment. Malaysia’s KLIA Aeropolis and India’s Jewar Airport, for example, are being built with city-scale economic zones in mind.

\n

Asia is not only building more airports - it is building bigger, smarter, and more connected airports. These modern mega airports are using biometrics, AI, automation, and sustainability to support scalable growth without sacrificing passenger experience and efficiency.

\n

Right across the region, significant infrastructure developments are underway, meaning that Asian airports will be well placed to serve the surge in demand for domestic and international air travel in Asia, driven by rapid economic growth, the rising middle class, and urbanisation. It won’t be long before the exclusive 100 Million Club has some new members.

\n
\n

Read part one of the series here.

\n

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

","rss_summary":"

The Asia-Pacific region is experiencing a significant surge in air travel, with IATA projecting that passenger numbers will double by 2043. To cope with this strong demand, airports in the region are undertaking extensive development work to upgrade existing facilities and build new airports between 2025 and 2035 and beyond.

\n

","rss_body":"

The Asia-Pacific region is experiencing a significant surge in air travel, with IATA projecting that passenger numbers will double by 2043. To cope with this strong demand, airports in the region are undertaking extensive development work to upgrade existing facilities and build new airports between 2025 and 2035 and beyond.

\n

Deirdre F

\n

This construction boom is fuelling an accelerating trend towards mega airports in the region – classified by ACI as those able to handle over 100 million passengers. According to OAG’s scheduled capacity data for 2024, only one Asian airport, Tokyo Haneda (HND), had over 100 million seats filled by airlines that operate from the airport, reaching a total of 110 million.

\n
\n

In infrastructure terms, Tokyo Haneda Airport can handle approximately 90 million passengers annually. In 2024, it came close to that threshold, handling 85 million passengers. When looking at seat capacity - the number of airline seats filled by carriers from each airport – Tokyo Haneda is the only large Asian airport to have surpassed 100 million seats. However, Shanghai Pudong, Beijing Capital, and Delhi are all close behind with between 90-95 million scheduled airline seats in 2024.

\n
\n\n

Which airports could join the 100 million club?

\n

Here are some of the projects currently underway that aim to enable Asia’s largest airports to handle over 100 million passengers annually and join the 100 Million Club, most likely in the next decade:

\n

Changi Airport (Singapore) Terminal 5:

\n\n

Hong Kong International Airport:

\n\n

Suvarnabhumi Airport (Bangkok):

\n\n

Incheon International Airport (Seoul):

\n\n

Long Thanh International Airport (Ho Chi Minh City):

\n\n

Philippines (Greater Manila region):

\n\n

Other notable, significant airport development projects across Asia include:

\n\n

Several of the key airport projects are also strategic investments in Megahubs, with countries positioning their airports as regional or global transfer hubs, which encourages scale. Singapore, Bangkok Suvarnabhumi, Incheon, and Hong Kong are all expanding to attract global long-haul and intercontinental transfers, and the New Manila Airport is designed to compete with regional giants in Kuala Lumpur and Singapore Changi.

\n

MEGAHUBS 2024   Discover the definitive ranking of the world's most connected airports.  

\n

Another key factor is replacing or supplementing capacity-constrained airports. Some major cities are landlocked or have outdated infrastructure:

\n\n

Asian governments see these aviation hubs as catalysts for foreign and domestic investment, tourism, and employment. Malaysia’s KLIA Aeropolis and India’s Jewar Airport, for example, are being built with city-scale economic zones in mind.

\n

Asia is not only building more airports - it is building bigger, smarter, and more connected airports. These modern mega airports are using biometrics, AI, automation, and sustainability to support scalable growth without sacrificing passenger experience and efficiency.

\n

Right across the region, significant infrastructure developments are underway, meaning that Asian airports will be well placed to serve the surge in demand for domestic and international air travel in Asia, driven by rapid economic growth, the rising middle class, and urbanisation. It won’t be long before the exclusive 100 Million Club has some new members.

\n
\n

Read part one of the series here.

\n

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

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The Asia-Pacific region is experiencing a significant surge in air travel, with IATA projecting that passenger numbers will double by 2043. To cope with this strong demand, airports in the region are undertaking extensive development work to upgrade existing facilities and build new airports between 2025 and 2035 and beyond.

\n

Deirdre F

\n

This construction boom is fuelling an accelerating trend towards mega airports in the region – classified by ACI as those able to handle over 100 million passengers. According to OAG’s scheduled capacity data for 2024, only one Asian airport, Tokyo Haneda (HND), had over 100 million seats filled by airlines that operate from the airport, reaching a total of 110 million.

\n
\n

In infrastructure terms, Tokyo Haneda Airport can handle approximately 90 million passengers annually. In 2024, it came close to that threshold, handling 85 million passengers. When looking at seat capacity - the number of airline seats filled by carriers from each airport – Tokyo Haneda is the only large Asian airport to have surpassed 100 million seats. However, Shanghai Pudong, Beijing Capital, and Delhi are all close behind with between 90-95 million scheduled airline seats in 2024.

\n
\n\n

Which airports could join the 100 million club?

\n

Here are some of the projects currently underway that aim to enable Asia’s largest airports to handle over 100 million passengers annually and join the 100 Million Club, most likely in the next decade:

\n

Changi Airport (Singapore) Terminal 5:

\n\n

Hong Kong International Airport:

\n\n

Suvarnabhumi Airport (Bangkok):

\n\n

Incheon International Airport (Seoul):

\n\n

Long Thanh International Airport (Ho Chi Minh City):

\n\n

Philippines (Greater Manila region):

\n\n

Other notable, significant airport development projects across Asia include:

\n\n

Several of the key airport projects are also strategic investments in Megahubs, with countries positioning their airports as regional or global transfer hubs, which encourages scale. Singapore, Bangkok Suvarnabhumi, Incheon, and Hong Kong are all expanding to attract global long-haul and intercontinental transfers, and the New Manila Airport is designed to compete with regional giants in Kuala Lumpur and Singapore Changi.

\n

MEGAHUBS 2024   Discover the definitive ranking of the world's most connected airports.  

\n

Another key factor is replacing or supplementing capacity-constrained airports. Some major cities are landlocked or have outdated infrastructure:

\n\n

Asian governments see these aviation hubs as catalysts for foreign and domestic investment, tourism, and employment. Malaysia’s KLIA Aeropolis and India’s Jewar Airport, for example, are being built with city-scale economic zones in mind.

\n

Asia is not only building more airports - it is building bigger, smarter, and more connected airports. These modern mega airports are using biometrics, AI, automation, and sustainability to support scalable growth without sacrificing passenger experience and efficiency.

\n

Right across the region, significant infrastructure developments are underway, meaning that Asian airports will be well placed to serve the surge in demand for domestic and international air travel in Asia, driven by rapid economic growth, the rising middle class, and urbanisation. It won’t be long before the exclusive 100 Million Club has some new members.

\n
\n

Read part one of the series here.

\n

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

","postBodyRss":"

The Asia-Pacific region is experiencing a significant surge in air travel, with IATA projecting that passenger numbers will double by 2043. To cope with this strong demand, airports in the region are undertaking extensive development work to upgrade existing facilities and build new airports between 2025 and 2035 and beyond.

\n

Deirdre F

\n

This construction boom is fuelling an accelerating trend towards mega airports in the region – classified by ACI as those able to handle over 100 million passengers. According to OAG’s scheduled capacity data for 2024, only one Asian airport, Tokyo Haneda (HND), had over 100 million seats filled by airlines that operate from the airport, reaching a total of 110 million.

\n
\n

In infrastructure terms, Tokyo Haneda Airport can handle approximately 90 million passengers annually. In 2024, it came close to that threshold, handling 85 million passengers. When looking at seat capacity - the number of airline seats filled by carriers from each airport – Tokyo Haneda is the only large Asian airport to have surpassed 100 million seats. However, Shanghai Pudong, Beijing Capital, and Delhi are all close behind with between 90-95 million scheduled airline seats in 2024.

\n
\n\n

Which airports could join the 100 million club?

\n

Here are some of the projects currently underway that aim to enable Asia’s largest airports to handle over 100 million passengers annually and join the 100 Million Club, most likely in the next decade:

\n

Changi Airport (Singapore) Terminal 5:

\n\n

Hong Kong International Airport:

\n\n

Suvarnabhumi Airport (Bangkok):

\n\n

Incheon International Airport (Seoul):

\n\n

Long Thanh International Airport (Ho Chi Minh City):

\n\n

Philippines (Greater Manila region):

\n\n

Other notable, significant airport development projects across Asia include:

\n\n

Several of the key airport projects are also strategic investments in Megahubs, with countries positioning their airports as regional or global transfer hubs, which encourages scale. Singapore, Bangkok Suvarnabhumi, Incheon, and Hong Kong are all expanding to attract global long-haul and intercontinental transfers, and the New Manila Airport is designed to compete with regional giants in Kuala Lumpur and Singapore Changi.

\n

MEGAHUBS 2024   Discover the definitive ranking of the world's most connected airports.  

\n

Another key factor is replacing or supplementing capacity-constrained airports. Some major cities are landlocked or have outdated infrastructure:

\n\n

Asian governments see these aviation hubs as catalysts for foreign and domestic investment, tourism, and employment. Malaysia’s KLIA Aeropolis and India’s Jewar Airport, for example, are being built with city-scale economic zones in mind.

\n

Asia is not only building more airports - it is building bigger, smarter, and more connected airports. These modern mega airports are using biometrics, AI, automation, and sustainability to support scalable growth without sacrificing passenger experience and efficiency.

\n

Right across the region, significant infrastructure developments are underway, meaning that Asian airports will be well placed to serve the surge in demand for domestic and international air travel in Asia, driven by rapid economic growth, the rising middle class, and urbanisation. It won’t be long before the exclusive 100 Million Club has some new members.

\n
\n

Read part one of the series here.

\n

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

","postEmailContent":"

The Asia-Pacific region is experiencing a significant surge in air travel, with IATA projecting that passenger numbers will double by 2043. To cope with this strong demand, airports in the region are undertaking extensive development work to upgrade existing facilities and build new airports between 2025 and 2035 and beyond.

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/100%20million%20club%20part%20two.jpg","postListContent":"

The Asia-Pacific region is experiencing a significant surge in air travel, with IATA projecting that passenger numbers will double by 2043. To cope with this strong demand, airports in the region are undertaking extensive development work to upgrade existing facilities and build new airports between 2025 and 2035 and beyond.

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/100%20million%20club%20part%20two.jpg","postRssContent":"

The Asia-Pacific region is experiencing a significant surge in air travel, with IATA projecting that passenger numbers will double by 2043. To cope with this strong demand, airports in the region are undertaking extensive development work to upgrade existing facilities and build new airports between 2025 and 2035 and beyond.

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/100%20million%20club%20part%20two.jpg","postSummary":"

The Asia-Pacific region is experiencing a significant surge in air travel, with IATA projecting that passenger numbers will double by 2043. To cope with this strong demand, airports in the region are undertaking extensive development work to upgrade existing facilities and build new airports between 2025 and 2035 and beyond.

\n

","postSummaryRss":"

The Asia-Pacific region is experiencing a significant surge in air travel, with IATA projecting that passenger numbers will double by 2043. To cope with this strong demand, airports in the region are undertaking extensive development work to upgrade existing facilities and build new airports between 2025 and 2035 and beyond.

","postTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"NjPNhpQu","previousPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/LATAM%20recovery%20blog%20pic.jpg","previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","previousPostName":"Latin America’s Airline Comeback: Is This Recovery Built to Last?","previousPostSlug":"blog/latin-americas-airline-comeback-is-this-recovery-built-to-last","processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1753261200000,"publishDateLocalTime":1753261200000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1753261200000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":"en_GB"},"publishImmediately":true,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1753261200486,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":64413925,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog/100-million-club-the-rise-of-mega-airports-part-2","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

The Asia-Pacific region is experiencing a significant surge in air travel, with IATA projecting that passenger numbers will double by 2043. To cope with this strong demand, airports in the region are undertaking extensive development work to upgrade existing facilities and build new airports between 2025 and 2035 and beyond.

\n

Deirdre F

\n

This construction boom is fuelling an accelerating trend towards mega airports in the region – classified by ACI as those able to handle over 100 million passengers. According to OAG’s scheduled capacity data for 2024, only one Asian airport, Tokyo Haneda (HND), had over 100 million seats filled by airlines that operate from the airport, reaching a total of 110 million.

\n
\n

In infrastructure terms, Tokyo Haneda Airport can handle approximately 90 million passengers annually. In 2024, it came close to that threshold, handling 85 million passengers. When looking at seat capacity - the number of airline seats filled by carriers from each airport – Tokyo Haneda is the only large Asian airport to have surpassed 100 million seats. However, Shanghai Pudong, Beijing Capital, and Delhi are all close behind with between 90-95 million scheduled airline seats in 2024.

\n
\n\n

Which airports could join the 100 million club?

\n

Here are some of the projects currently underway that aim to enable Asia’s largest airports to handle over 100 million passengers annually and join the 100 Million Club, most likely in the next decade:

\n

Changi Airport (Singapore) Terminal 5:

\n\n

Hong Kong International Airport:

\n\n

Suvarnabhumi Airport (Bangkok):

\n\n

Incheon International Airport (Seoul):

\n\n

Long Thanh International Airport (Ho Chi Minh City):

\n\n

Philippines (Greater Manila region):

\n\n

Other notable, significant airport development projects across Asia include:

\n\n

Several of the key airport projects are also strategic investments in Megahubs, with countries positioning their airports as regional or global transfer hubs, which encourages scale. Singapore, Bangkok Suvarnabhumi, Incheon, and Hong Kong are all expanding to attract global long-haul and intercontinental transfers, and the New Manila Airport is designed to compete with regional giants in Kuala Lumpur and Singapore Changi.

\n

MEGAHUBS 2024   Discover the definitive ranking of the world's most connected airports.  

\n

Another key factor is replacing or supplementing capacity-constrained airports. Some major cities are landlocked or have outdated infrastructure:

\n\n

Asian governments see these aviation hubs as catalysts for foreign and domestic investment, tourism, and employment. Malaysia’s KLIA Aeropolis and India’s Jewar Airport, for example, are being built with city-scale economic zones in mind.

\n

Asia is not only building more airports - it is building bigger, smarter, and more connected airports. These modern mega airports are using biometrics, AI, automation, and sustainability to support scalable growth without sacrificing passenger experience and efficiency.

\n

Right across the region, significant infrastructure developments are underway, meaning that Asian airports will be well placed to serve the surge in demand for domestic and international air travel in Asia, driven by rapid economic growth, the rising middle class, and urbanisation. It won’t be long before the exclusive 100 Million Club has some new members.

\n
\n

Read part one of the series here.

\n

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

","rssSummary":"

The Asia-Pacific region is experiencing a significant surge in air travel, with IATA projecting that passenger numbers will double by 2043. To cope with this strong demand, airports in the region are undertaking extensive development work to upgrade existing facilities and build new airports between 2025 and 2035 and beyond.

\n

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Few markets have experienced such turbulent growth in the aviation sector as Latin America, where often the factors behind the turbulence are entirely outside of the airlines’ control. This, once again, highlights how challenging it is to successfully build and sustain scheduled airlines.

","post_body":"

Few markets have experienced such turbulent growth in the aviation sector as Latin America, where often the factors behind the turbulence are entirely outside of the airlines’ control. This, once again, highlights how challenging it is to successfully build and sustain scheduled airlines.

\n

Sadly, Latin America’s history is marked by the collapse of once-prominent legacy airlines, including globally recognised names such as Varig. Despite this, there have also been various pieces of consolidation and strategic mergers that have seen carriers both survive and expand over time.

\n

In the last five years, the three largest locally based airlines in Latin America have all filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Encouragingly, all have either exited or are about to exit from the process stronger and ready to fight again. Looking ahead, the key question remains: what’s different this time? Has anything fundamentally changed in the market that will enable these airlines not just to survive, but flourish? Or will we see a repeat of the seemingly regular cycle of boom and bust? Let’s look at some key factors.

\n

John G

\n

Domestic Markets Dominate

\n

In most regional markets it’s very difficult to make a profit, and while they can generate significant revenues in Latin America, some domestic airfares are regulated in part, which makes it even harder for the locally based airlines. In the table below, we have plotted ASK production by locally based airlines across both domestic and international networks since 1996:

\n\n
\n

Fierce Regional International Competition

\n

Part of the challenge of the broader market - and particularly Lower South America - is the limited number of regional markets for development. Lower South America has just five mainland markets (excluding the Falkland Isles), and 95% of all international capacity is operated purely within the region, making for an extremely competitive market. In Upper South America, that regional capacity share reduces slightly to 86%. In both cases, a high reliance on the local regional markets places pressure on those airlines operating, which is reflected in the number of scheduled airlines operating in the international regional markets of Lower South America.

\n

As the table below shows, the number of airlines operating international regional services in Upper South America has reduced by eight, compared to 1996. In the Lower South America, the number of operators has fallen by nearly two-thirds, leaving 12 airlines today. This highlights just how challenging the market can be for every operator.

\n

Such a highly competitive market and the difficult trading environment explains one of the key developments of recent years in the Latin American market: pragmatic cross-border consolidation.

\n
\n

Embracing Consolidation

\n

While airline mergers are not new, cross-border mergers and partnerships are a relatively new development in an industry where airlines have been seen by many as national strategic assets to be owned by local companies. Such historic ownership rights, in many markets, protect weaker operators from overseas investment and prevent the establishment of a market scale that is necessary to succeed in tough international markets. However, in Latin America, such cross-border consolidation has been recognised as the only sensible long-term operating model for airlines that are not only competing locally but with some extremely strong long-haul international competition.

\n

The merger of LAN and TAM airlines in 2012 was the first noticeable example of such cross-border consolidation and was finally followed by the merger of TACA and Avianca – with, of course, the TACA part adding an interesting Central American angle to that development. The primary goal of both mergers was to create airlines with the scale and network reach necessary to withstand short-term market fluctuations and, ultimately, to compete effectively on the global stage against large and formidable international carriers. Since the mergers, both newly formed entities have expanded their networks significantly and have engaged actively with global airline alliances. While LATAM chose to exit the Oneworld alliance in 2020, Avianca has remained a full member of Star Alliance.

\n

Unfortunately for both consolidated airlines, a series of events in the last five years have led to both entering Chapter 11 processes and indeed exiting in the last three years; LATAM in November 2022 and Avianca a year earlier in 2021. While Chapter 11 is a strange process for many to understand and only possible in a few countries, both airlines filed their cases in the United States and sought the necessary protection to reorganise their businesses and become fit for a changing market after a pandemic that had destroyed their balance sheets. But having taken such steps, have the two airlines - and will the current Gol/Azul merger - make a significant difference to their long-term futures? There are certainly some big challenges that have to be faced!

\n\n

Incredibly Strong Competition

\n

If competition is good for the consumer, then the Latin American market is well placed. However, for the locally based airlines, that competition is extremely tough - not only are they competing against the likes of American Airlines, United and Iberia, they are also competing with their respective networks - and for the local airlines, that is a real challenge.

\n

Let’s take the US market as an example. In 2024, nearly two-thirds of passengers travelling between the two countries travelled indirectly to their destination and were spread across more than three hundred different US destinations, ranging from Miami with 865k estimated bookings through to small markets such as Lubbock with an estimated 1,600 passengers. For US-based airlines (and their respective mega hubs in Miami, Houston and Atlanta), Latin America serves as a valuable source of connecting traffic, which the locally based airlines find very hard to compete with.

\n

The situation is equally as challenging on transatlantic routes to Europe. In 2024, Iberia, leveraging its Madrid hub, benefited from strong connecting flows from secondary European cities like Geneva, Malaga, Vienna, and Berlin—markets that are too small to sustain direct long-haul services from Latin American airlines.

\n

Market fragmentation is nothing new, but clearly favours the power of the mega hubs and explains why those carriers with such hubs are so well placed. However, other factors outside of the control of the locally based Latin American airlines are perhaps even more important.

\n\n

The Power of The Greenback

\n

Aviation is a global industry in which many of the operating costs are US dollar-based, and for airlines operating in Latin America, this is a real problem when the majority of their revenues are generated in local currencies that have typically traded poorly against the US Dollar.

\n

While the Brazilian Real has remained unchanged in terms of value against the US Dollar in the last year, the Argentinian Peso has seen a 33% reduction in value, making all operating costs for Argentinian-based carriers increase significantly in twelve months. In part, a 13% reduction in oil prices will have eased some of that currency pain, but the combination of these two uncontrollable factors are a daily concern for every Latin American airline, and any global economic turndown will surely impact the Latin American market.

\n

IATA Latest Market Assessment

\n

The latest IATA assessment of the Latin American market, published in their Global Outlook Update in early June, highlighted some key areas of concern for the market along with one perhaps double-edged positive initiative. Argentina’s move towards an open skies regime is welcome, although the current currency weakness offsets a large part of that positivity, while the threat of a 26% VAT charge of Brazilian domestic services will cripple demand for all but the very elastic and wealthy traveller.

\n

Consequently, the 2025 expectation is for the market to deliver a net profit of some US$1.1 billion, the equivalent of around US$3.4 profit per passenger, hardly a huge return for such a capital-intensive industry. Should 2025 perform as expected, then the cumulative losses in the region will be in the region of US$20.3 million, and while those losses include the pandemic period in financial terms, the market is one of the slowest to bounce back.

\n

Despite the vulnerability of the market, and perhaps not surprisingly, Boeing have a positive outlook on the future of the Latin American market. In their latest Market Outlook Forecast the manufacturer notes the strength of the emergence of a middle class that includes 40% of the population in Latin America and expects that proportion to grow further, driving continued expansion of the LCC sector. To support that growth, Boeing forecast the market to require an additional 2,100 single-aisle aircraft over the next twenty-five years, of which 57% will be for market growth.

\n

Sadly, the future success of the major Latin American airlines is probably outside of their control, however clever the management team and the strategy adopted. Such is the influence of those external factors in this market that even the best-managed companies can hit some major obstacles in their growth, and that’s before the intense competitive pressure is considered. Hopefully, we are entering a boom period for these airlines and the broader market, but if history is an indicator of future events, then at some point it will once again call for some creative thinking.

\n

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

","rss_summary":"

Few markets have experienced such turbulent growth in the aviation sector as Latin America, where often the factors behind the turbulence are entirely outside of the airlines’ control. This, once again, highlights how challenging it is to successfully build and sustain scheduled airlines.

","rss_body":"

Few markets have experienced such turbulent growth in the aviation sector as Latin America, where often the factors behind the turbulence are entirely outside of the airlines’ control. This, once again, highlights how challenging it is to successfully build and sustain scheduled airlines.

\n

Sadly, Latin America’s history is marked by the collapse of once-prominent legacy airlines, including globally recognised names such as Varig. Despite this, there have also been various pieces of consolidation and strategic mergers that have seen carriers both survive and expand over time.

\n

In the last five years, the three largest locally based airlines in Latin America have all filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Encouragingly, all have either exited or are about to exit from the process stronger and ready to fight again. Looking ahead, the key question remains: what’s different this time? Has anything fundamentally changed in the market that will enable these airlines not just to survive, but flourish? Or will we see a repeat of the seemingly regular cycle of boom and bust? Let’s look at some key factors.

\n

John G

\n

Domestic Markets Dominate

\n

In most regional markets it’s very difficult to make a profit, and while they can generate significant revenues in Latin America, some domestic airfares are regulated in part, which makes it even harder for the locally based airlines. In the table below, we have plotted ASK production by locally based airlines across both domestic and international networks since 1996:

\n\n
\n

Fierce Regional International Competition

\n

Part of the challenge of the broader market - and particularly Lower South America - is the limited number of regional markets for development. Lower South America has just five mainland markets (excluding the Falkland Isles), and 95% of all international capacity is operated purely within the region, making for an extremely competitive market. In Upper South America, that regional capacity share reduces slightly to 86%. In both cases, a high reliance on the local regional markets places pressure on those airlines operating, which is reflected in the number of scheduled airlines operating in the international regional markets of Lower South America.

\n

As the table below shows, the number of airlines operating international regional services in Upper South America has reduced by eight, compared to 1996. In the Lower South America, the number of operators has fallen by nearly two-thirds, leaving 12 airlines today. This highlights just how challenging the market can be for every operator.

\n

Such a highly competitive market and the difficult trading environment explains one of the key developments of recent years in the Latin American market: pragmatic cross-border consolidation.

\n
\n

Embracing Consolidation

\n

While airline mergers are not new, cross-border mergers and partnerships are a relatively new development in an industry where airlines have been seen by many as national strategic assets to be owned by local companies. Such historic ownership rights, in many markets, protect weaker operators from overseas investment and prevent the establishment of a market scale that is necessary to succeed in tough international markets. However, in Latin America, such cross-border consolidation has been recognised as the only sensible long-term operating model for airlines that are not only competing locally but with some extremely strong long-haul international competition.

\n

The merger of LAN and TAM airlines in 2012 was the first noticeable example of such cross-border consolidation and was finally followed by the merger of TACA and Avianca – with, of course, the TACA part adding an interesting Central American angle to that development. The primary goal of both mergers was to create airlines with the scale and network reach necessary to withstand short-term market fluctuations and, ultimately, to compete effectively on the global stage against large and formidable international carriers. Since the mergers, both newly formed entities have expanded their networks significantly and have engaged actively with global airline alliances. While LATAM chose to exit the Oneworld alliance in 2020, Avianca has remained a full member of Star Alliance.

\n

Unfortunately for both consolidated airlines, a series of events in the last five years have led to both entering Chapter 11 processes and indeed exiting in the last three years; LATAM in November 2022 and Avianca a year earlier in 2021. While Chapter 11 is a strange process for many to understand and only possible in a few countries, both airlines filed their cases in the United States and sought the necessary protection to reorganise their businesses and become fit for a changing market after a pandemic that had destroyed their balance sheets. But having taken such steps, have the two airlines - and will the current Gol/Azul merger - make a significant difference to their long-term futures? There are certainly some big challenges that have to be faced!

\n\n

Incredibly Strong Competition

\n

If competition is good for the consumer, then the Latin American market is well placed. However, for the locally based airlines, that competition is extremely tough - not only are they competing against the likes of American Airlines, United and Iberia, they are also competing with their respective networks - and for the local airlines, that is a real challenge.

\n

Let’s take the US market as an example. In 2024, nearly two-thirds of passengers travelling between the two countries travelled indirectly to their destination and were spread across more than three hundred different US destinations, ranging from Miami with 865k estimated bookings through to small markets such as Lubbock with an estimated 1,600 passengers. For US-based airlines (and their respective mega hubs in Miami, Houston and Atlanta), Latin America serves as a valuable source of connecting traffic, which the locally based airlines find very hard to compete with.

\n

The situation is equally as challenging on transatlantic routes to Europe. In 2024, Iberia, leveraging its Madrid hub, benefited from strong connecting flows from secondary European cities like Geneva, Malaga, Vienna, and Berlin—markets that are too small to sustain direct long-haul services from Latin American airlines.

\n

Market fragmentation is nothing new, but clearly favours the power of the mega hubs and explains why those carriers with such hubs are so well placed. However, other factors outside of the control of the locally based Latin American airlines are perhaps even more important.

\n\n

The Power of The Greenback

\n

Aviation is a global industry in which many of the operating costs are US dollar-based, and for airlines operating in Latin America, this is a real problem when the majority of their revenues are generated in local currencies that have typically traded poorly against the US Dollar.

\n

While the Brazilian Real has remained unchanged in terms of value against the US Dollar in the last year, the Argentinian Peso has seen a 33% reduction in value, making all operating costs for Argentinian-based carriers increase significantly in twelve months. In part, a 13% reduction in oil prices will have eased some of that currency pain, but the combination of these two uncontrollable factors are a daily concern for every Latin American airline, and any global economic turndown will surely impact the Latin American market.

\n

IATA Latest Market Assessment

\n

The latest IATA assessment of the Latin American market, published in their Global Outlook Update in early June, highlighted some key areas of concern for the market along with one perhaps double-edged positive initiative. Argentina’s move towards an open skies regime is welcome, although the current currency weakness offsets a large part of that positivity, while the threat of a 26% VAT charge of Brazilian domestic services will cripple demand for all but the very elastic and wealthy traveller.

\n

Consequently, the 2025 expectation is for the market to deliver a net profit of some US$1.1 billion, the equivalent of around US$3.4 profit per passenger, hardly a huge return for such a capital-intensive industry. Should 2025 perform as expected, then the cumulative losses in the region will be in the region of US$20.3 million, and while those losses include the pandemic period in financial terms, the market is one of the slowest to bounce back.

\n

Despite the vulnerability of the market, and perhaps not surprisingly, Boeing have a positive outlook on the future of the Latin American market. In their latest Market Outlook Forecast the manufacturer notes the strength of the emergence of a middle class that includes 40% of the population in Latin America and expects that proportion to grow further, driving continued expansion of the LCC sector. To support that growth, Boeing forecast the market to require an additional 2,100 single-aisle aircraft over the next twenty-five years, of which 57% will be for market growth.

\n

Sadly, the future success of the major Latin American airlines is probably outside of their control, however clever the management team and the strategy adopted. Such is the influence of those external factors in this market that even the best-managed companies can hit some major obstacles in their growth, and that’s before the intense competitive pressure is considered. Hopefully, we are entering a boom period for these airlines and the broader market, but if history is an indicator of future events, then at some point it will once again call for some creative thinking.

\n

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

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Few markets have experienced such turbulent growth in the aviation sector as Latin America, where often the factors behind the turbulence are entirely outside of the airlines’ control. This, once again, highlights how challenging it is to successfully build and sustain scheduled airlines.

\n

Sadly, Latin America’s history is marked by the collapse of once-prominent legacy airlines, including globally recognised names such as Varig. Despite this, there have also been various pieces of consolidation and strategic mergers that have seen carriers both survive and expand over time.

\n

In the last five years, the three largest locally based airlines in Latin America have all filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Encouragingly, all have either exited or are about to exit from the process stronger and ready to fight again. Looking ahead, the key question remains: what’s different this time? Has anything fundamentally changed in the market that will enable these airlines not just to survive, but flourish? Or will we see a repeat of the seemingly regular cycle of boom and bust? Let’s look at some key factors.

\n

John G

\n

Domestic Markets Dominate

\n

In most regional markets it’s very difficult to make a profit, and while they can generate significant revenues in Latin America, some domestic airfares are regulated in part, which makes it even harder for the locally based airlines. In the table below, we have plotted ASK production by locally based airlines across both domestic and international networks since 1996:

\n\n
\n

Fierce Regional International Competition

\n

Part of the challenge of the broader market - and particularly Lower South America - is the limited number of regional markets for development. Lower South America has just five mainland markets (excluding the Falkland Isles), and 95% of all international capacity is operated purely within the region, making for an extremely competitive market. In Upper South America, that regional capacity share reduces slightly to 86%. In both cases, a high reliance on the local regional markets places pressure on those airlines operating, which is reflected in the number of scheduled airlines operating in the international regional markets of Lower South America.

\n

As the table below shows, the number of airlines operating international regional services in Upper South America has reduced by eight, compared to 1996. In the Lower South America, the number of operators has fallen by nearly two-thirds, leaving 12 airlines today. This highlights just how challenging the market can be for every operator.

\n

Such a highly competitive market and the difficult trading environment explains one of the key developments of recent years in the Latin American market: pragmatic cross-border consolidation.

\n
\n

Embracing Consolidation

\n

While airline mergers are not new, cross-border mergers and partnerships are a relatively new development in an industry where airlines have been seen by many as national strategic assets to be owned by local companies. Such historic ownership rights, in many markets, protect weaker operators from overseas investment and prevent the establishment of a market scale that is necessary to succeed in tough international markets. However, in Latin America, such cross-border consolidation has been recognised as the only sensible long-term operating model for airlines that are not only competing locally but with some extremely strong long-haul international competition.

\n

The merger of LAN and TAM airlines in 2012 was the first noticeable example of such cross-border consolidation and was finally followed by the merger of TACA and Avianca – with, of course, the TACA part adding an interesting Central American angle to that development. The primary goal of both mergers was to create airlines with the scale and network reach necessary to withstand short-term market fluctuations and, ultimately, to compete effectively on the global stage against large and formidable international carriers. Since the mergers, both newly formed entities have expanded their networks significantly and have engaged actively with global airline alliances. While LATAM chose to exit the Oneworld alliance in 2020, Avianca has remained a full member of Star Alliance.

\n

Unfortunately for both consolidated airlines, a series of events in the last five years have led to both entering Chapter 11 processes and indeed exiting in the last three years; LATAM in November 2022 and Avianca a year earlier in 2021. While Chapter 11 is a strange process for many to understand and only possible in a few countries, both airlines filed their cases in the United States and sought the necessary protection to reorganise their businesses and become fit for a changing market after a pandemic that had destroyed their balance sheets. But having taken such steps, have the two airlines - and will the current Gol/Azul merger - make a significant difference to their long-term futures? There are certainly some big challenges that have to be faced!

\n\n

Incredibly Strong Competition

\n

If competition is good for the consumer, then the Latin American market is well placed. However, for the locally based airlines, that competition is extremely tough - not only are they competing against the likes of American Airlines, United and Iberia, they are also competing with their respective networks - and for the local airlines, that is a real challenge.

\n

Let’s take the US market as an example. In 2024, nearly two-thirds of passengers travelling between the two countries travelled indirectly to their destination and were spread across more than three hundred different US destinations, ranging from Miami with 865k estimated bookings through to small markets such as Lubbock with an estimated 1,600 passengers. For US-based airlines (and their respective mega hubs in Miami, Houston and Atlanta), Latin America serves as a valuable source of connecting traffic, which the locally based airlines find very hard to compete with.

\n

The situation is equally as challenging on transatlantic routes to Europe. In 2024, Iberia, leveraging its Madrid hub, benefited from strong connecting flows from secondary European cities like Geneva, Malaga, Vienna, and Berlin—markets that are too small to sustain direct long-haul services from Latin American airlines.

\n

Market fragmentation is nothing new, but clearly favours the power of the mega hubs and explains why those carriers with such hubs are so well placed. However, other factors outside of the control of the locally based Latin American airlines are perhaps even more important.

\n\n

The Power of The Greenback

\n

Aviation is a global industry in which many of the operating costs are US dollar-based, and for airlines operating in Latin America, this is a real problem when the majority of their revenues are generated in local currencies that have typically traded poorly against the US Dollar.

\n

While the Brazilian Real has remained unchanged in terms of value against the US Dollar in the last year, the Argentinian Peso has seen a 33% reduction in value, making all operating costs for Argentinian-based carriers increase significantly in twelve months. In part, a 13% reduction in oil prices will have eased some of that currency pain, but the combination of these two uncontrollable factors are a daily concern for every Latin American airline, and any global economic turndown will surely impact the Latin American market.

\n

IATA Latest Market Assessment

\n

The latest IATA assessment of the Latin American market, published in their Global Outlook Update in early June, highlighted some key areas of concern for the market along with one perhaps double-edged positive initiative. Argentina’s move towards an open skies regime is welcome, although the current currency weakness offsets a large part of that positivity, while the threat of a 26% VAT charge of Brazilian domestic services will cripple demand for all but the very elastic and wealthy traveller.

\n

Consequently, the 2025 expectation is for the market to deliver a net profit of some US$1.1 billion, the equivalent of around US$3.4 profit per passenger, hardly a huge return for such a capital-intensive industry. Should 2025 perform as expected, then the cumulative losses in the region will be in the region of US$20.3 million, and while those losses include the pandemic period in financial terms, the market is one of the slowest to bounce back.

\n

Despite the vulnerability of the market, and perhaps not surprisingly, Boeing have a positive outlook on the future of the Latin American market. In their latest Market Outlook Forecast the manufacturer notes the strength of the emergence of a middle class that includes 40% of the population in Latin America and expects that proportion to grow further, driving continued expansion of the LCC sector. To support that growth, Boeing forecast the market to require an additional 2,100 single-aisle aircraft over the next twenty-five years, of which 57% will be for market growth.

\n

Sadly, the future success of the major Latin American airlines is probably outside of their control, however clever the management team and the strategy adopted. Such is the influence of those external factors in this market that even the best-managed companies can hit some major obstacles in their growth, and that’s before the intense competitive pressure is considered. Hopefully, we are entering a boom period for these airlines and the broader market, but if history is an indicator of future events, then at some point it will once again call for some creative thinking.

\n

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

","postBodyRss":"

Few markets have experienced such turbulent growth in the aviation sector as Latin America, where often the factors behind the turbulence are entirely outside of the airlines’ control. This, once again, highlights how challenging it is to successfully build and sustain scheduled airlines.

\n

Sadly, Latin America’s history is marked by the collapse of once-prominent legacy airlines, including globally recognised names such as Varig. Despite this, there have also been various pieces of consolidation and strategic mergers that have seen carriers both survive and expand over time.

\n

In the last five years, the three largest locally based airlines in Latin America have all filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Encouragingly, all have either exited or are about to exit from the process stronger and ready to fight again. Looking ahead, the key question remains: what’s different this time? Has anything fundamentally changed in the market that will enable these airlines not just to survive, but flourish? Or will we see a repeat of the seemingly regular cycle of boom and bust? Let’s look at some key factors.

\n

John G

\n

Domestic Markets Dominate

\n

In most regional markets it’s very difficult to make a profit, and while they can generate significant revenues in Latin America, some domestic airfares are regulated in part, which makes it even harder for the locally based airlines. In the table below, we have plotted ASK production by locally based airlines across both domestic and international networks since 1996:

\n\n
\n

Fierce Regional International Competition

\n

Part of the challenge of the broader market - and particularly Lower South America - is the limited number of regional markets for development. Lower South America has just five mainland markets (excluding the Falkland Isles), and 95% of all international capacity is operated purely within the region, making for an extremely competitive market. In Upper South America, that regional capacity share reduces slightly to 86%. In both cases, a high reliance on the local regional markets places pressure on those airlines operating, which is reflected in the number of scheduled airlines operating in the international regional markets of Lower South America.

\n

As the table below shows, the number of airlines operating international regional services in Upper South America has reduced by eight, compared to 1996. In the Lower South America, the number of operators has fallen by nearly two-thirds, leaving 12 airlines today. This highlights just how challenging the market can be for every operator.

\n

Such a highly competitive market and the difficult trading environment explains one of the key developments of recent years in the Latin American market: pragmatic cross-border consolidation.

\n
\n

Embracing Consolidation

\n

While airline mergers are not new, cross-border mergers and partnerships are a relatively new development in an industry where airlines have been seen by many as national strategic assets to be owned by local companies. Such historic ownership rights, in many markets, protect weaker operators from overseas investment and prevent the establishment of a market scale that is necessary to succeed in tough international markets. However, in Latin America, such cross-border consolidation has been recognised as the only sensible long-term operating model for airlines that are not only competing locally but with some extremely strong long-haul international competition.

\n

The merger of LAN and TAM airlines in 2012 was the first noticeable example of such cross-border consolidation and was finally followed by the merger of TACA and Avianca – with, of course, the TACA part adding an interesting Central American angle to that development. The primary goal of both mergers was to create airlines with the scale and network reach necessary to withstand short-term market fluctuations and, ultimately, to compete effectively on the global stage against large and formidable international carriers. Since the mergers, both newly formed entities have expanded their networks significantly and have engaged actively with global airline alliances. While LATAM chose to exit the Oneworld alliance in 2020, Avianca has remained a full member of Star Alliance.

\n

Unfortunately for both consolidated airlines, a series of events in the last five years have led to both entering Chapter 11 processes and indeed exiting in the last three years; LATAM in November 2022 and Avianca a year earlier in 2021. While Chapter 11 is a strange process for many to understand and only possible in a few countries, both airlines filed their cases in the United States and sought the necessary protection to reorganise their businesses and become fit for a changing market after a pandemic that had destroyed their balance sheets. But having taken such steps, have the two airlines - and will the current Gol/Azul merger - make a significant difference to their long-term futures? There are certainly some big challenges that have to be faced!

\n\n

Incredibly Strong Competition

\n

If competition is good for the consumer, then the Latin American market is well placed. However, for the locally based airlines, that competition is extremely tough - not only are they competing against the likes of American Airlines, United and Iberia, they are also competing with their respective networks - and for the local airlines, that is a real challenge.

\n

Let’s take the US market as an example. In 2024, nearly two-thirds of passengers travelling between the two countries travelled indirectly to their destination and were spread across more than three hundred different US destinations, ranging from Miami with 865k estimated bookings through to small markets such as Lubbock with an estimated 1,600 passengers. For US-based airlines (and their respective mega hubs in Miami, Houston and Atlanta), Latin America serves as a valuable source of connecting traffic, which the locally based airlines find very hard to compete with.

\n

The situation is equally as challenging on transatlantic routes to Europe. In 2024, Iberia, leveraging its Madrid hub, benefited from strong connecting flows from secondary European cities like Geneva, Malaga, Vienna, and Berlin—markets that are too small to sustain direct long-haul services from Latin American airlines.

\n

Market fragmentation is nothing new, but clearly favours the power of the mega hubs and explains why those carriers with such hubs are so well placed. However, other factors outside of the control of the locally based Latin American airlines are perhaps even more important.

\n\n

The Power of The Greenback

\n

Aviation is a global industry in which many of the operating costs are US dollar-based, and for airlines operating in Latin America, this is a real problem when the majority of their revenues are generated in local currencies that have typically traded poorly against the US Dollar.

\n

While the Brazilian Real has remained unchanged in terms of value against the US Dollar in the last year, the Argentinian Peso has seen a 33% reduction in value, making all operating costs for Argentinian-based carriers increase significantly in twelve months. In part, a 13% reduction in oil prices will have eased some of that currency pain, but the combination of these two uncontrollable factors are a daily concern for every Latin American airline, and any global economic turndown will surely impact the Latin American market.

\n

IATA Latest Market Assessment

\n

The latest IATA assessment of the Latin American market, published in their Global Outlook Update in early June, highlighted some key areas of concern for the market along with one perhaps double-edged positive initiative. Argentina’s move towards an open skies regime is welcome, although the current currency weakness offsets a large part of that positivity, while the threat of a 26% VAT charge of Brazilian domestic services will cripple demand for all but the very elastic and wealthy traveller.

\n

Consequently, the 2025 expectation is for the market to deliver a net profit of some US$1.1 billion, the equivalent of around US$3.4 profit per passenger, hardly a huge return for such a capital-intensive industry. Should 2025 perform as expected, then the cumulative losses in the region will be in the region of US$20.3 million, and while those losses include the pandemic period in financial terms, the market is one of the slowest to bounce back.

\n

Despite the vulnerability of the market, and perhaps not surprisingly, Boeing have a positive outlook on the future of the Latin American market. In their latest Market Outlook Forecast the manufacturer notes the strength of the emergence of a middle class that includes 40% of the population in Latin America and expects that proportion to grow further, driving continued expansion of the LCC sector. To support that growth, Boeing forecast the market to require an additional 2,100 single-aisle aircraft over the next twenty-five years, of which 57% will be for market growth.

\n

Sadly, the future success of the major Latin American airlines is probably outside of their control, however clever the management team and the strategy adopted. Such is the influence of those external factors in this market that even the best-managed companies can hit some major obstacles in their growth, and that’s before the intense competitive pressure is considered. Hopefully, we are entering a boom period for these airlines and the broader market, but if history is an indicator of future events, then at some point it will once again call for some creative thinking.

\n

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

","postEmailContent":"

Few markets have experienced such turbulent growth in the aviation sector as Latin America, where often the factors behind the turbulence are entirely outside of the airlines’ control. This, once again, highlights how challenging it is to successfully build and sustain scheduled airlines.

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Few markets have experienced such turbulent growth in the aviation sector as Latin America, where often the factors behind the turbulence are entirely outside of the airlines’ control. This, once again, highlights how challenging it is to successfully build and sustain scheduled airlines.

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/LATAM%20recovery%20blog%20pic.jpg","postRssContent":"

Few markets have experienced such turbulent growth in the aviation sector as Latin America, where often the factors behind the turbulence are entirely outside of the airlines’ control. This, once again, highlights how challenging it is to successfully build and sustain scheduled airlines.

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/LATAM%20recovery%20blog%20pic.jpg","postSummary":"

Few markets have experienced such turbulent growth in the aviation sector as Latin America, where often the factors behind the turbulence are entirely outside of the airlines’ control. This, once again, highlights how challenging it is to successfully build and sustain scheduled airlines.

","postSummaryRss":"

Few markets have experienced such turbulent growth in the aviation sector as Latin America, where often the factors behind the turbulence are entirely outside of the airlines’ control. This, once again, highlights how challenging it is to successfully build and sustain scheduled airlines.

","postTemplate":"oag-theme/templates/blog-post.html","previewImageSrc":null,"previewKey":"eoBEfLML","previousPostFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/100%20million%20club%20part%20two.jpg","previousPostFeaturedImageAltText":"","previousPostName":"100 Million Club: The Rise of Mega Airports | Part 2","previousPostSlug":"blog/100-million-club-the-rise-of-mega-airports-part-2","processingStatus":"PUBLISHED","propertyForDynamicPageCanonicalUrl":null,"propertyForDynamicPageFeaturedImage":null,"propertyForDynamicPageMetaDescription":null,"propertyForDynamicPageSlug":null,"propertyForDynamicPageTitle":null,"publicAccessRules":[],"publicAccessRulesEnabled":false,"publishDate":1752747300000,"publishDateLocalTime":1752747300000,"publishDateLocalized":{"date":1752747300000,"format":"dd MMMM yyyy","language":"en_GB"},"publishImmediately":true,"publishTimezoneOffset":null,"publishedAt":1752747300731,"publishedByEmail":null,"publishedById":64413925,"publishedByName":null,"publishedUrl":"https://www.oag.com/blog/latin-americas-airline-comeback-is-this-recovery-built-to-last","resolvedDomain":"www.oag.com","resolvedLanguage":null,"rssBody":"

Few markets have experienced such turbulent growth in the aviation sector as Latin America, where often the factors behind the turbulence are entirely outside of the airlines’ control. This, once again, highlights how challenging it is to successfully build and sustain scheduled airlines.

\n

Sadly, Latin America’s history is marked by the collapse of once-prominent legacy airlines, including globally recognised names such as Varig. Despite this, there have also been various pieces of consolidation and strategic mergers that have seen carriers both survive and expand over time.

\n

In the last five years, the three largest locally based airlines in Latin America have all filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Encouragingly, all have either exited or are about to exit from the process stronger and ready to fight again. Looking ahead, the key question remains: what’s different this time? Has anything fundamentally changed in the market that will enable these airlines not just to survive, but flourish? Or will we see a repeat of the seemingly regular cycle of boom and bust? Let’s look at some key factors.

\n

John G

\n

Domestic Markets Dominate

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In most regional markets it’s very difficult to make a profit, and while they can generate significant revenues in Latin America, some domestic airfares are regulated in part, which makes it even harder for the locally based airlines. In the table below, we have plotted ASK production by locally based airlines across both domestic and international networks since 1996:

\n\n
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Fierce Regional International Competition

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Part of the challenge of the broader market - and particularly Lower South America - is the limited number of regional markets for development. Lower South America has just five mainland markets (excluding the Falkland Isles), and 95% of all international capacity is operated purely within the region, making for an extremely competitive market. In Upper South America, that regional capacity share reduces slightly to 86%. In both cases, a high reliance on the local regional markets places pressure on those airlines operating, which is reflected in the number of scheduled airlines operating in the international regional markets of Lower South America.

\n

As the table below shows, the number of airlines operating international regional services in Upper South America has reduced by eight, compared to 1996. In the Lower South America, the number of operators has fallen by nearly two-thirds, leaving 12 airlines today. This highlights just how challenging the market can be for every operator.

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Such a highly competitive market and the difficult trading environment explains one of the key developments of recent years in the Latin American market: pragmatic cross-border consolidation.

\n
\n

Embracing Consolidation

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While airline mergers are not new, cross-border mergers and partnerships are a relatively new development in an industry where airlines have been seen by many as national strategic assets to be owned by local companies. Such historic ownership rights, in many markets, protect weaker operators from overseas investment and prevent the establishment of a market scale that is necessary to succeed in tough international markets. However, in Latin America, such cross-border consolidation has been recognised as the only sensible long-term operating model for airlines that are not only competing locally but with some extremely strong long-haul international competition.

\n

The merger of LAN and TAM airlines in 2012 was the first noticeable example of such cross-border consolidation and was finally followed by the merger of TACA and Avianca – with, of course, the TACA part adding an interesting Central American angle to that development. The primary goal of both mergers was to create airlines with the scale and network reach necessary to withstand short-term market fluctuations and, ultimately, to compete effectively on the global stage against large and formidable international carriers. Since the mergers, both newly formed entities have expanded their networks significantly and have engaged actively with global airline alliances. While LATAM chose to exit the Oneworld alliance in 2020, Avianca has remained a full member of Star Alliance.

\n

Unfortunately for both consolidated airlines, a series of events in the last five years have led to both entering Chapter 11 processes and indeed exiting in the last three years; LATAM in November 2022 and Avianca a year earlier in 2021. While Chapter 11 is a strange process for many to understand and only possible in a few countries, both airlines filed their cases in the United States and sought the necessary protection to reorganise their businesses and become fit for a changing market after a pandemic that had destroyed their balance sheets. But having taken such steps, have the two airlines - and will the current Gol/Azul merger - make a significant difference to their long-term futures? There are certainly some big challenges that have to be faced!

\n\n

Incredibly Strong Competition

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If competition is good for the consumer, then the Latin American market is well placed. However, for the locally based airlines, that competition is extremely tough - not only are they competing against the likes of American Airlines, United and Iberia, they are also competing with their respective networks - and for the local airlines, that is a real challenge.

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Let’s take the US market as an example. In 2024, nearly two-thirds of passengers travelling between the two countries travelled indirectly to their destination and were spread across more than three hundred different US destinations, ranging from Miami with 865k estimated bookings through to small markets such as Lubbock with an estimated 1,600 passengers. For US-based airlines (and their respective mega hubs in Miami, Houston and Atlanta), Latin America serves as a valuable source of connecting traffic, which the locally based airlines find very hard to compete with.

\n

The situation is equally as challenging on transatlantic routes to Europe. In 2024, Iberia, leveraging its Madrid hub, benefited from strong connecting flows from secondary European cities like Geneva, Malaga, Vienna, and Berlin—markets that are too small to sustain direct long-haul services from Latin American airlines.

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Market fragmentation is nothing new, but clearly favours the power of the mega hubs and explains why those carriers with such hubs are so well placed. However, other factors outside of the control of the locally based Latin American airlines are perhaps even more important.

\n\n

The Power of The Greenback

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Aviation is a global industry in which many of the operating costs are US dollar-based, and for airlines operating in Latin America, this is a real problem when the majority of their revenues are generated in local currencies that have typically traded poorly against the US Dollar.

\n

While the Brazilian Real has remained unchanged in terms of value against the US Dollar in the last year, the Argentinian Peso has seen a 33% reduction in value, making all operating costs for Argentinian-based carriers increase significantly in twelve months. In part, a 13% reduction in oil prices will have eased some of that currency pain, but the combination of these two uncontrollable factors are a daily concern for every Latin American airline, and any global economic turndown will surely impact the Latin American market.

\n

IATA Latest Market Assessment

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The latest IATA assessment of the Latin American market, published in their Global Outlook Update in early June, highlighted some key areas of concern for the market along with one perhaps double-edged positive initiative. Argentina’s move towards an open skies regime is welcome, although the current currency weakness offsets a large part of that positivity, while the threat of a 26% VAT charge of Brazilian domestic services will cripple demand for all but the very elastic and wealthy traveller.

\n

Consequently, the 2025 expectation is for the market to deliver a net profit of some US$1.1 billion, the equivalent of around US$3.4 profit per passenger, hardly a huge return for such a capital-intensive industry. Should 2025 perform as expected, then the cumulative losses in the region will be in the region of US$20.3 million, and while those losses include the pandemic period in financial terms, the market is one of the slowest to bounce back.

\n

Despite the vulnerability of the market, and perhaps not surprisingly, Boeing have a positive outlook on the future of the Latin American market. In their latest Market Outlook Forecast the manufacturer notes the strength of the emergence of a middle class that includes 40% of the population in Latin America and expects that proportion to grow further, driving continued expansion of the LCC sector. To support that growth, Boeing forecast the market to require an additional 2,100 single-aisle aircraft over the next twenty-five years, of which 57% will be for market growth.

\n

Sadly, the future success of the major Latin American airlines is probably outside of their control, however clever the management team and the strategy adopted. Such is the influence of those external factors in this market that even the best-managed companies can hit some major obstacles in their growth, and that’s before the intense competitive pressure is considered. Hopefully, we are entering a boom period for these airlines and the broader market, but if history is an indicator of future events, then at some point it will once again call for some creative thinking.

\n

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Few markets have experienced such turbulent growth in the aviation sector as Latin America, where often the factors behind the turbulence are entirely outside of the airlines’ control. This, once again, highlights how challenging it is to successfully build and sustain scheduled airlines.

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3 Charts Tell the Story","id":192644897314,"includeDefaultCustomCss":null,"isCaptchaRequired":true,"isCrawlableByBots":false,"isDraft":false,"isInstantEmailEnabled":true,"isPublished":true,"isSocialPublishingEnabled":false,"keywords":[],"label":"Can Thailand Fill a Shortfall in Chinese Capacity? 3 Charts Tell the Story","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":{"tag_ids":[66382214546],"topic_ids":[66382214546],"post_summary":"

Just three charts can give us an overview of how Thailand’s international air capacity is faring in summer 2025. During OAG’s June webinar, we noted that the China to Thailand market in summer 2025 was still significantly behind 2019, by 44%, and 20% below last summer. Given that China is Thailand’s biggest international market, this appears to be bad news, so let’s take a look.

","post_body":"

Just three charts can give us an overview of how Thailand’s international air capacity is faring in summer 2025. During OAG’s June webinar, we noted that the China to Thailand market in summer 2025 was still significantly behind 2019, by 44%, and 20% below last summer. Given that China is Thailand’s biggest international market, this appears to be bad news, so let’s take a look.

\n

Deirdre F

\n

The first chart shows that in summer 2019:

\n\n

None of these three markets has yet returned to summer 2019 (pre-pandemic) levels.

\n

 

\n
\n

The data behind the chart tells us that this summer, there are just 4.1 million seats from China to Thailand, meaning that while it’s still the largest market, it remains considerably behind previous heights. This represents a reduction since last summer, down from 5.1 million, suggesting Chinese travellers are opting to go elsewhere this year.

\n

The second chart in our short overview highlights the percentage change in capacity for each of Thailand’s Top 10 international markets, and the overall position. We can see that China, Singapore, Hong Kong and South Korea are all experiencing reduced capacity to Thailand, both compared to summer 2019 and summer 2024, suggesting that demand for travel to and from these destinations is moving elsewhere.

\n
\n

For some other top country markets, there is year-on-year growth this summer, notably Japan (+7%) and Vietnam (+21%). However, both of these countries still have less capacity than in summer 2019; for Japan, seats are 27% behind summer 2019 and Vietnam, 4% behind.

\n

So how is Thailand responding? In the final chart, we look at whether the gap in capacity from China is being filled. Whilst China - Thailand capacity represents a drop of just over 1m seats, we can see that growth in other international markets is actually more than compensating for this reduction.

\n

\"Thailand

\n

There is strong capacity growth this summer from India, Vietnam, the UAE and across a range of other smaller markets, resulting in a net increase overall in Thailand’s international capacity of 0.4 million seats.

\n

For the India - Thailand market, a combination of factors is driving growth: 

\n\n

So in this case, the headline 'China to Thailand capacity reduction' potentially masks the real story, which is growth is still happening, just in different ways and from different markets. 

\n\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Blog subscribe

\n

 

","rss_summary":"

Just three charts can give us an overview of how Thailand’s international air capacity is faring in summer 2025. During OAG’s June webinar, we noted that the China to Thailand market in summer 2025 was still significantly behind 2019, by 44%, and 20% below last summer. Given that China is Thailand’s biggest international market, this appears to be bad news, so let’s take a look.

","rss_body":"

Just three charts can give us an overview of how Thailand’s international air capacity is faring in summer 2025. During OAG’s June webinar, we noted that the China to Thailand market in summer 2025 was still significantly behind 2019, by 44%, and 20% below last summer. Given that China is Thailand’s biggest international market, this appears to be bad news, so let’s take a look.

\n

Deirdre F

\n

The first chart shows that in summer 2019:

\n\n

None of these three markets has yet returned to summer 2019 (pre-pandemic) levels.

\n

 

\n
\n

The data behind the chart tells us that this summer, there are just 4.1 million seats from China to Thailand, meaning that while it’s still the largest market, it remains considerably behind previous heights. This represents a reduction since last summer, down from 5.1 million, suggesting Chinese travellers are opting to go elsewhere this year.

\n

The second chart in our short overview highlights the percentage change in capacity for each of Thailand’s Top 10 international markets, and the overall position. We can see that China, Singapore, Hong Kong and South Korea are all experiencing reduced capacity to Thailand, both compared to summer 2019 and summer 2024, suggesting that demand for travel to and from these destinations is moving elsewhere.

\n
\n

For some other top country markets, there is year-on-year growth this summer, notably Japan (+7%) and Vietnam (+21%). However, both of these countries still have less capacity than in summer 2019; for Japan, seats are 27% behind summer 2019 and Vietnam, 4% behind.

\n

So how is Thailand responding? In the final chart, we look at whether the gap in capacity from China is being filled. Whilst China - Thailand capacity represents a drop of just over 1m seats, we can see that growth in other international markets is actually more than compensating for this reduction.

\n

\"Thailand

\n

There is strong capacity growth this summer from India, Vietnam, the UAE and across a range of other smaller markets, resulting in a net increase overall in Thailand’s international capacity of 0.4 million seats.

\n

For the India - Thailand market, a combination of factors is driving growth: 

\n\n

So in this case, the headline 'China to Thailand capacity reduction' potentially masks the real story, which is growth is still happening, just in different ways and from different markets. 

\n\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Blog subscribe

\n

 

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Just three charts can give us an overview of how Thailand’s international air capacity is faring in summer 2025. During OAG’s June webinar, we noted that the China to Thailand market in summer 2025 was still significantly behind 2019, by 44%, and 20% below last summer. Given that China is Thailand’s biggest international market, this appears to be bad news, so let’s take a look.

\n

Deirdre F

\n

The first chart shows that in summer 2019:

\n\n

None of these three markets has yet returned to summer 2019 (pre-pandemic) levels.

\n

 

\n
\n

The data behind the chart tells us that this summer, there are just 4.1 million seats from China to Thailand, meaning that while it’s still the largest market, it remains considerably behind previous heights. This represents a reduction since last summer, down from 5.1 million, suggesting Chinese travellers are opting to go elsewhere this year.

\n

The second chart in our short overview highlights the percentage change in capacity for each of Thailand’s Top 10 international markets, and the overall position. We can see that China, Singapore, Hong Kong and South Korea are all experiencing reduced capacity to Thailand, both compared to summer 2019 and summer 2024, suggesting that demand for travel to and from these destinations is moving elsewhere.

\n
\n

For some other top country markets, there is year-on-year growth this summer, notably Japan (+7%) and Vietnam (+21%). However, both of these countries still have less capacity than in summer 2019; for Japan, seats are 27% behind summer 2019 and Vietnam, 4% behind.

\n

So how is Thailand responding? In the final chart, we look at whether the gap in capacity from China is being filled. Whilst China - Thailand capacity represents a drop of just over 1m seats, we can see that growth in other international markets is actually more than compensating for this reduction.

\n

\"Thailand

\n

There is strong capacity growth this summer from India, Vietnam, the UAE and across a range of other smaller markets, resulting in a net increase overall in Thailand’s international capacity of 0.4 million seats.

\n

For the India - Thailand market, a combination of factors is driving growth: 

\n\n

So in this case, the headline 'China to Thailand capacity reduction' potentially masks the real story, which is growth is still happening, just in different ways and from different markets. 

\n\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Blog subscribe

\n

 

","postBodyRss":"

Just three charts can give us an overview of how Thailand’s international air capacity is faring in summer 2025. During OAG’s June webinar, we noted that the China to Thailand market in summer 2025 was still significantly behind 2019, by 44%, and 20% below last summer. Given that China is Thailand’s biggest international market, this appears to be bad news, so let’s take a look.

\n

Deirdre F

\n

The first chart shows that in summer 2019:

\n\n

None of these three markets has yet returned to summer 2019 (pre-pandemic) levels.

\n

 

\n
\n

The data behind the chart tells us that this summer, there are just 4.1 million seats from China to Thailand, meaning that while it’s still the largest market, it remains considerably behind previous heights. This represents a reduction since last summer, down from 5.1 million, suggesting Chinese travellers are opting to go elsewhere this year.

\n

The second chart in our short overview highlights the percentage change in capacity for each of Thailand’s Top 10 international markets, and the overall position. We can see that China, Singapore, Hong Kong and South Korea are all experiencing reduced capacity to Thailand, both compared to summer 2019 and summer 2024, suggesting that demand for travel to and from these destinations is moving elsewhere.

\n
\n

For some other top country markets, there is year-on-year growth this summer, notably Japan (+7%) and Vietnam (+21%). However, both of these countries still have less capacity than in summer 2019; for Japan, seats are 27% behind summer 2019 and Vietnam, 4% behind.

\n

So how is Thailand responding? In the final chart, we look at whether the gap in capacity from China is being filled. Whilst China - Thailand capacity represents a drop of just over 1m seats, we can see that growth in other international markets is actually more than compensating for this reduction.

\n

\"Thailand

\n

There is strong capacity growth this summer from India, Vietnam, the UAE and across a range of other smaller markets, resulting in a net increase overall in Thailand’s international capacity of 0.4 million seats.

\n

For the India - Thailand market, a combination of factors is driving growth: 

\n\n

So in this case, the headline 'China to Thailand capacity reduction' potentially masks the real story, which is growth is still happening, just in different ways and from different markets. 

\n\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Blog subscribe

\n

 

","postEmailContent":"

Just three charts can give us an overview of how Thailand’s international air capacity is faring in summer 2025. During OAG’s June webinar, we noted that the China to Thailand market in summer 2025 was still significantly behind 2019, by 44%, and 20% below last summer. Given that China is Thailand’s biggest international market, this appears to be bad news, so let’s take a look.

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Thailand%20China%20Gap.jpg","postListContent":"

Just three charts can give us an overview of how Thailand’s international air capacity is faring in summer 2025. During OAG’s June webinar, we noted that the China to Thailand market in summer 2025 was still significantly behind 2019, by 44%, and 20% below last summer. Given that China is Thailand’s biggest international market, this appears to be bad news, so let’s take a look.

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Thailand%20China%20Gap.jpg","postRssContent":"

Just three charts can give us an overview of how Thailand’s international air capacity is faring in summer 2025. During OAG’s June webinar, we noted that the China to Thailand market in summer 2025 was still significantly behind 2019, by 44%, and 20% below last summer. Given that China is Thailand’s biggest international market, this appears to be bad news, so let’s take a look.

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Thailand%20China%20Gap.jpg","postSummary":"

Just three charts can give us an overview of how Thailand’s international air capacity is faring in summer 2025. During OAG’s June webinar, we noted that the China to Thailand market in summer 2025 was still significantly behind 2019, by 44%, and 20% below last summer. Given that China is Thailand’s biggest international market, this appears to be bad news, so let’s take a look.

","postSummaryRss":"

Just three charts can give us an overview of how Thailand’s international air capacity is faring in summer 2025. During OAG’s June webinar, we noted that the China to Thailand market in summer 2025 was still significantly behind 2019, by 44%, and 20% below last summer. Given that China is Thailand’s biggest international market, this appears to be bad news, so let’s take a look.

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Just three charts can give us an overview of how Thailand’s international air capacity is faring in summer 2025. During OAG’s June webinar, we noted that the China to Thailand market in summer 2025 was still significantly behind 2019, by 44%, and 20% below last summer. Given that China is Thailand’s biggest international market, this appears to be bad news, so let’s take a look.

\n

Deirdre F

\n

The first chart shows that in summer 2019:

\n\n

None of these three markets has yet returned to summer 2019 (pre-pandemic) levels.

\n

 

\n
\n

The data behind the chart tells us that this summer, there are just 4.1 million seats from China to Thailand, meaning that while it’s still the largest market, it remains considerably behind previous heights. This represents a reduction since last summer, down from 5.1 million, suggesting Chinese travellers are opting to go elsewhere this year.

\n

The second chart in our short overview highlights the percentage change in capacity for each of Thailand’s Top 10 international markets, and the overall position. We can see that China, Singapore, Hong Kong and South Korea are all experiencing reduced capacity to Thailand, both compared to summer 2019 and summer 2024, suggesting that demand for travel to and from these destinations is moving elsewhere.

\n
\n

For some other top country markets, there is year-on-year growth this summer, notably Japan (+7%) and Vietnam (+21%). However, both of these countries still have less capacity than in summer 2019; for Japan, seats are 27% behind summer 2019 and Vietnam, 4% behind.

\n

So how is Thailand responding? In the final chart, we look at whether the gap in capacity from China is being filled. Whilst China - Thailand capacity represents a drop of just over 1m seats, we can see that growth in other international markets is actually more than compensating for this reduction.

\n

\"Thailand

\n

There is strong capacity growth this summer from India, Vietnam, the UAE and across a range of other smaller markets, resulting in a net increase overall in Thailand’s international capacity of 0.4 million seats.

\n

For the India - Thailand market, a combination of factors is driving growth: 

\n\n

So in this case, the headline 'China to Thailand capacity reduction' potentially masks the real story, which is growth is still happening, just in different ways and from different markets. 

\n\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Blog subscribe

\n

 

","rssSummary":"

Just three charts can give us an overview of how Thailand’s international air capacity is faring in summer 2025. During OAG’s June webinar, we noted that the China to Thailand market in summer 2025 was still significantly behind 2019, by 44%, and 20% below last summer. Given that China is Thailand’s biggest international market, this appears to be bad news, so let’s take a look.

","rssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Thailand%20China%20Gap.jpg","scheduledUpdateDate":0,"screenshotPreviewTakenAt":1752567302942,"screenshotPreviewUrl":"https://cdn1.hubspot.net/hubshotv3/prod/e/0/1c837f58-be66-4a14-8b03-96107fb10162.png","sections":{},"securityState":"NONE","siteId":null,"slug":"blog/can-thailand-fill-a-shortfall-in-chinese-capacity","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":"Can Thailand Fill a Shortfall in Chinese Capacity? 3 Charts Tell the Story","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":1752567302033,"updatedById":100,"upsizeFeaturedImage":false,"url":"https://www.oag.com/blog/can-thailand-fill-a-shortfall-in-chinese-capacity","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/track-indias-aviation-growth","afterPostBody":null,"aifeatures":null,"allowedSlugConflict":false,"analytics":null,"analyticsPageId":"192352580867","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/deirdre.jpg","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1506335917443,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"Deirdre Fulton","email":"","facebook":"","fullName":"Deirdre Fulton","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":false,"id":5353522539,"label":"Deirdre Fulton","language":null,"linkedin":"","name":"Deirdre Fulton","portalId":490937,"slug":"deirdre-fulton","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"","twitterUsername":"","updated":1528705954944,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":""},"blogAuthorId":5353522539,"blogPostAuthor":{"avatar":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/deirdre.jpg","bio":"","cdnPurgeEmbargoTime":null,"cosObjectType":"BLOG_AUTHOR","created":1506335917443,"deletedAt":0,"displayName":"Deirdre Fulton","email":"","facebook":"","fullName":"Deirdre Fulton","gravatarUrl":null,"hasSocialProfiles":false,"id":5353522539,"label":"Deirdre Fulton","language":null,"linkedin":"","name":"Deirdre Fulton","portalId":490937,"slug":"deirdre-fulton","translatedFromId":null,"translations":{},"twitter":"","twitterUsername":"","updated":1528705954944,"userId":null,"username":null,"website":""},"blogPostScheduleTaskUid":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailCampaignId":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailRetryCount":null,"blogPublishInstantEmailTaskUid":"DONE","blogPublishToSocialMediaTask":"DONE_NOT_SENT","blueprintTypeId":0,"businessUnitId":null,"campaign":"1f0c520a-427d-4cec-b07c-3152775c2729","campaignName":"2025 Q3: Blog Content","campaignUtm":"15764252-2025%20Q3%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":1751987790308,"createdByAgent":null,"createdById":47234281,"createdTime":1751987790308,"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/Delhi%20Airport.jpg","featuredImageAltText":"","featuredImageHeight":900,"featuredImageLength":0,"featuredImageWidth":1600,"flexAreas":{},"folderId":null,"footerHtml":null,"freezeDate":1752053630000,"generateJsonLdEnabledOverride":true,"hasContentAccessRules":false,"hasUserChanges":true,"headHtml":null,"header":null,"htmlTitle":"Track India’s Aviation Growth:  Key Industry Insights | OAG","id":192352580867,"includeDefaultCustomCss":null,"isCaptchaRequired":true,"isCrawlableByBots":false,"isDraft":false,"isInstantEmailEnabled":true,"isPublished":true,"isSocialPublishingEnabled":false,"keywords":[],"label":"Track India’s Aviation Growth: Key Industry Insights","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":{"tag_ids":[66382214546],"topic_ids":[66382214546],"post_summary":"

OAG has launched its latest aviation insights dashboard focused on India, one of the fastest-growing aviation markets in the world. This dashboard provides critical market intelligence and highlights the key drivers behind India’s rapidly transforming aviation sector.

\n

","post_body":"

OAG has launched its latest aviation insights dashboard focused on India, one of the fastest-growing aviation markets in the world. This dashboard provides critical market intelligence and highlights the key drivers behind India’s rapidly transforming aviation sector.

\n

\n

Indian Aviation Market Data >>

\n

Indian Aviation’s Growth in Context

\n

India is the world’s most populous nation, but despite this, it ranks third globally in domestic air capacity, trailing behind the United States and China which have much more mature air service markets. Access to air travel in India is growing fast, however, as disposable income grows in the emerging middle class and air connectivity improves across the vast geography of India. This is undoubtedly driving international air capacity growth which this July is a very healthy 8.1% ahead of July 2024, with particularly strong growth to destinations in Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Saudi Arabia.

\n

With India’s two largest carriers – IndiGo and the Air India group - leading the transformation and growth of India’s aviation sector and collectively accounting for just over three quarters of capacity, OAG provides visibility on how they, and others, are growing year on year and where the focus of that growth is.

\n
\n

Infrastructure Expansion

\n

Airport capacity is keeping pace, with the planned new airports at Navi Mumbai and Noida International (near Delhi) scheduled for opening in mid to late 2025, bringing much needed room for growth in both of these metropolitan areas. More widely, there are plans for 50 new airports across India to be constructed between now and the end of the decade, and more into the 2030s. India currently has 117 airports with scheduled services, and the aspiration nationally is for this to grow above 200, facilitating the vision that 95% of India’s population should be within 100km of an airport.

\n

Currently two thirds of India’s domestic capacity operates through the Top 10 largest airports, however this is likely to become more widely distributed as new airports are constructed, and route networks grow.

\n
\n

Looking inwards, domestic capacity has experienced strong growth in the last couple of years, with a rate of 7.8% for the 12 months to July 2025, compared to the previous 12 months. In the first quarter of 2025, domestic capacity grew at an average rate of 10% compared to 2024, whilst in quarter two this slowed slightly to 8.4%. The latest capacity data for July 2025 shows a contraction in domestic capacity, by 2.2% compared to July 2024 partly as the delivery pipeline of new aircraft provides a brake on expansion and there is a slight slowdown in India’s economic growth.

\n

Looking Ahead

\n

India’s aviation market is on the cusp of significant transformation. With rapid growth in both domestic and international sectors, and substantial investments in infrastructure, the country is preparing to become a global aviation hub. OAG will continue to monitor this evolution closely through its data dashboards, offering valuable insights for industry stakeholders.

\n

Indian Aviation Market Data >>

","rss_summary":"

OAG has launched its latest aviation insights dashboard focused on India, one of the fastest-growing aviation markets in the world. This dashboard provides critical market intelligence and highlights the key drivers behind India’s rapidly transforming aviation sector.

\n

","rss_body":"

OAG has launched its latest aviation insights dashboard focused on India, one of the fastest-growing aviation markets in the world. This dashboard provides critical market intelligence and highlights the key drivers behind India’s rapidly transforming aviation sector.

\n

\n

Indian Aviation Market Data >>

\n

Indian Aviation’s Growth in Context

\n

India is the world’s most populous nation, but despite this, it ranks third globally in domestic air capacity, trailing behind the United States and China which have much more mature air service markets. Access to air travel in India is growing fast, however, as disposable income grows in the emerging middle class and air connectivity improves across the vast geography of India. This is undoubtedly driving international air capacity growth which this July is a very healthy 8.1% ahead of July 2024, with particularly strong growth to destinations in Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Saudi Arabia.

\n

With India’s two largest carriers – IndiGo and the Air India group - leading the transformation and growth of India’s aviation sector and collectively accounting for just over three quarters of capacity, OAG provides visibility on how they, and others, are growing year on year and where the focus of that growth is.

\n
\n

Infrastructure Expansion

\n

Airport capacity is keeping pace, with the planned new airports at Navi Mumbai and Noida International (near Delhi) scheduled for opening in mid to late 2025, bringing much needed room for growth in both of these metropolitan areas. More widely, there are plans for 50 new airports across India to be constructed between now and the end of the decade, and more into the 2030s. India currently has 117 airports with scheduled services, and the aspiration nationally is for this to grow above 200, facilitating the vision that 95% of India’s population should be within 100km of an airport.

\n

Currently two thirds of India’s domestic capacity operates through the Top 10 largest airports, however this is likely to become more widely distributed as new airports are constructed, and route networks grow.

\n
\n

Looking inwards, domestic capacity has experienced strong growth in the last couple of years, with a rate of 7.8% for the 12 months to July 2025, compared to the previous 12 months. In the first quarter of 2025, domestic capacity grew at an average rate of 10% compared to 2024, whilst in quarter two this slowed slightly to 8.4%. The latest capacity data for July 2025 shows a contraction in domestic capacity, by 2.2% compared to July 2024 partly as the delivery pipeline of new aircraft provides a brake on expansion and there is a slight slowdown in India’s economic growth.

\n

Looking Ahead

\n

India’s aviation market is on the cusp of significant transformation. With rapid growth in both domestic and international sectors, and substantial investments in infrastructure, the country is preparing to become a global aviation hub. OAG will continue to monitor this evolution closely through its data dashboards, offering valuable insights for industry stakeholders.

\n

Indian Aviation Market Data >>

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OAG has launched its latest aviation insights dashboard focused on India, one of the fastest-growing aviation markets in the world. This dashboard provides critical market intelligence and highlights the key drivers behind India’s rapidly transforming aviation sector.

\n

\n

Indian Aviation Market Data >>

\n

Indian Aviation’s Growth in Context

\n

India is the world’s most populous nation, but despite this, it ranks third globally in domestic air capacity, trailing behind the United States and China which have much more mature air service markets. Access to air travel in India is growing fast, however, as disposable income grows in the emerging middle class and air connectivity improves across the vast geography of India. This is undoubtedly driving international air capacity growth which this July is a very healthy 8.1% ahead of July 2024, with particularly strong growth to destinations in Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Saudi Arabia.

\n

With India’s two largest carriers – IndiGo and the Air India group - leading the transformation and growth of India’s aviation sector and collectively accounting for just over three quarters of capacity, OAG provides visibility on how they, and others, are growing year on year and where the focus of that growth is.

\n
\n

Infrastructure Expansion

\n

Airport capacity is keeping pace, with the planned new airports at Navi Mumbai and Noida International (near Delhi) scheduled for opening in mid to late 2025, bringing much needed room for growth in both of these metropolitan areas. More widely, there are plans for 50 new airports across India to be constructed between now and the end of the decade, and more into the 2030s. India currently has 117 airports with scheduled services, and the aspiration nationally is for this to grow above 200, facilitating the vision that 95% of India’s population should be within 100km of an airport.

\n

Currently two thirds of India’s domestic capacity operates through the Top 10 largest airports, however this is likely to become more widely distributed as new airports are constructed, and route networks grow.

\n
\n

Looking inwards, domestic capacity has experienced strong growth in the last couple of years, with a rate of 7.8% for the 12 months to July 2025, compared to the previous 12 months. In the first quarter of 2025, domestic capacity grew at an average rate of 10% compared to 2024, whilst in quarter two this slowed slightly to 8.4%. The latest capacity data for July 2025 shows a contraction in domestic capacity, by 2.2% compared to July 2024 partly as the delivery pipeline of new aircraft provides a brake on expansion and there is a slight slowdown in India’s economic growth.

\n

Looking Ahead

\n

India’s aviation market is on the cusp of significant transformation. With rapid growth in both domestic and international sectors, and substantial investments in infrastructure, the country is preparing to become a global aviation hub. OAG will continue to monitor this evolution closely through its data dashboards, offering valuable insights for industry stakeholders.

\n

Indian Aviation Market Data >>

","postBodyRss":"

OAG has launched its latest aviation insights dashboard focused on India, one of the fastest-growing aviation markets in the world. This dashboard provides critical market intelligence and highlights the key drivers behind India’s rapidly transforming aviation sector.

\n

\n

Indian Aviation Market Data >>

\n

Indian Aviation’s Growth in Context

\n

India is the world’s most populous nation, but despite this, it ranks third globally in domestic air capacity, trailing behind the United States and China which have much more mature air service markets. Access to air travel in India is growing fast, however, as disposable income grows in the emerging middle class and air connectivity improves across the vast geography of India. This is undoubtedly driving international air capacity growth which this July is a very healthy 8.1% ahead of July 2024, with particularly strong growth to destinations in Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Saudi Arabia.

\n

With India’s two largest carriers – IndiGo and the Air India group - leading the transformation and growth of India’s aviation sector and collectively accounting for just over three quarters of capacity, OAG provides visibility on how they, and others, are growing year on year and where the focus of that growth is.

\n
\n

Infrastructure Expansion

\n

Airport capacity is keeping pace, with the planned new airports at Navi Mumbai and Noida International (near Delhi) scheduled for opening in mid to late 2025, bringing much needed room for growth in both of these metropolitan areas. More widely, there are plans for 50 new airports across India to be constructed between now and the end of the decade, and more into the 2030s. India currently has 117 airports with scheduled services, and the aspiration nationally is for this to grow above 200, facilitating the vision that 95% of India’s population should be within 100km of an airport.

\n

Currently two thirds of India’s domestic capacity operates through the Top 10 largest airports, however this is likely to become more widely distributed as new airports are constructed, and route networks grow.

\n
\n

Looking inwards, domestic capacity has experienced strong growth in the last couple of years, with a rate of 7.8% for the 12 months to July 2025, compared to the previous 12 months. In the first quarter of 2025, domestic capacity grew at an average rate of 10% compared to 2024, whilst in quarter two this slowed slightly to 8.4%. The latest capacity data for July 2025 shows a contraction in domestic capacity, by 2.2% compared to July 2024 partly as the delivery pipeline of new aircraft provides a brake on expansion and there is a slight slowdown in India’s economic growth.

\n

Looking Ahead

\n

India’s aviation market is on the cusp of significant transformation. With rapid growth in both domestic and international sectors, and substantial investments in infrastructure, the country is preparing to become a global aviation hub. OAG will continue to monitor this evolution closely through its data dashboards, offering valuable insights for industry stakeholders.

\n

Indian Aviation Market Data >>

","postEmailContent":"

OAG has launched its latest aviation insights dashboard focused on India, one of the fastest-growing aviation markets in the world. This dashboard provides critical market intelligence and highlights the key drivers behind India’s rapidly transforming aviation sector.

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Delhi%20Airport.jpg","postListContent":"

OAG has launched its latest aviation insights dashboard focused on India, one of the fastest-growing aviation markets in the world. This dashboard provides critical market intelligence and highlights the key drivers behind India’s rapidly transforming aviation sector.

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Delhi%20Airport.jpg","postRssContent":"

OAG has launched its latest aviation insights dashboard focused on India, one of the fastest-growing aviation markets in the world. This dashboard provides critical market intelligence and highlights the key drivers behind India’s rapidly transforming aviation sector.

","postRssSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/Delhi%20Airport.jpg","postSummary":"

OAG has launched its latest aviation insights dashboard focused on India, one of the fastest-growing aviation markets in the world. This dashboard provides critical market intelligence and highlights the key drivers behind India’s rapidly transforming aviation sector.

\n

","postSummaryRss":"

OAG has launched its latest aviation insights dashboard focused on India, one of the fastest-growing aviation markets in the world. This dashboard provides critical market intelligence and highlights the key drivers behind India’s rapidly transforming aviation sector.

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OAG has launched its latest aviation insights dashboard focused on India, one of the fastest-growing aviation markets in the world. This dashboard provides critical market intelligence and highlights the key drivers behind India’s rapidly transforming aviation sector.

\n

\n

Indian Aviation Market Data >>

\n

Indian Aviation’s Growth in Context

\n

India is the world’s most populous nation, but despite this, it ranks third globally in domestic air capacity, trailing behind the United States and China which have much more mature air service markets. Access to air travel in India is growing fast, however, as disposable income grows in the emerging middle class and air connectivity improves across the vast geography of India. This is undoubtedly driving international air capacity growth which this July is a very healthy 8.1% ahead of July 2024, with particularly strong growth to destinations in Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Saudi Arabia.

\n

With India’s two largest carriers – IndiGo and the Air India group - leading the transformation and growth of India’s aviation sector and collectively accounting for just over three quarters of capacity, OAG provides visibility on how they, and others, are growing year on year and where the focus of that growth is.

\n
\n

Infrastructure Expansion

\n

Airport capacity is keeping pace, with the planned new airports at Navi Mumbai and Noida International (near Delhi) scheduled for opening in mid to late 2025, bringing much needed room for growth in both of these metropolitan areas. More widely, there are plans for 50 new airports across India to be constructed between now and the end of the decade, and more into the 2030s. India currently has 117 airports with scheduled services, and the aspiration nationally is for this to grow above 200, facilitating the vision that 95% of India’s population should be within 100km of an airport.

\n

Currently two thirds of India’s domestic capacity operates through the Top 10 largest airports, however this is likely to become more widely distributed as new airports are constructed, and route networks grow.

\n
\n

Looking inwards, domestic capacity has experienced strong growth in the last couple of years, with a rate of 7.8% for the 12 months to July 2025, compared to the previous 12 months. In the first quarter of 2025, domestic capacity grew at an average rate of 10% compared to 2024, whilst in quarter two this slowed slightly to 8.4%. The latest capacity data for July 2025 shows a contraction in domestic capacity, by 2.2% compared to July 2024 partly as the delivery pipeline of new aircraft provides a brake on expansion and there is a slight slowdown in India’s economic growth.

\n

Looking Ahead

\n

India’s aviation market is on the cusp of significant transformation. With rapid growth in both domestic and international sectors, and substantial investments in infrastructure, the country is preparing to become a global aviation hub. OAG will continue to monitor this evolution closely through its data dashboards, offering valuable insights for industry stakeholders.

\n

Indian Aviation Market Data >>

","rssSummary":"

OAG has launched its latest aviation insights dashboard focused on India, one of the fastest-growing aviation markets in the world. This dashboard provides critical market intelligence and highlights the key drivers behind India’s rapidly transforming aviation sector.

\n

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For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Oliver Martin (Senior Director, Skift Inc) and Jacob Pewitt Yancey (Head of Analytics, Arrivalist) to dive into the latest global tourism trends.

\n","post_body":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Oliver Martin (Senior Director, Skift Inc) and Jacob Pewitt Yancey (Head of Analytics, Arrivalist) to dive into the latest global tourism trends.

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n
\n

A look at growth trends

\n

The panel began by starting at the top and looking at global growth trends:

\n\n
\n

Tariff impacts

\n

Next, the panel discussed one of the key topics of this month's webinar - tariffs - and began by examining the latest US visitor statistics, which had been published at the end of the previous week. (Preliminary, so subject to change).

\n\n
\n

 

\n

Oliver gave his thoughts on how much impact tariffs and evolving tariff policies will have on consumers' travel decisions:

\n
\n

Geopolitics and aviation

\n

In the last two months alone the industry has been impacted by a number of geopolitical events, including the escalating tensions between Israel and Iran which resulted in the closure of airspace in a number of neighbouring countries.

\n

Whilst the industry navigates unpredictable events such as short-notice airspace closures, and makes decisions about whether to fly to areas where conflict may escalate, what is the lasting impact on consumer sentiment and decisions to fly?

\n
\n

TOURISM TARGETS

\n

With 5 years to go until the end of the decade, a flurry of new 2030 tourism targets have been announced this year. The panel gave their thoughts:

\n
\n

What next?

\n

Having just spent 7 years leading the research team at Visit Florida, Jacob gave an insightful round-up to summarise the panel discussion:

\n
\n

 

\n
\n

Watch the full webinar below

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","rss_summary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Oliver Martin (Senior Director, Skift Inc) and Jacob Pewitt Yancey (Head of Analytics, Arrivalist) to dive into the latest global tourism trends.

\n","rss_body":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Oliver Martin (Senior Director, Skift Inc) and Jacob Pewitt Yancey (Head of Analytics, Arrivalist) to dive into the latest global tourism trends.

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n
\n

A look at growth trends

\n

The panel began by starting at the top and looking at global growth trends:

\n\n
\n

Tariff impacts

\n

Next, the panel discussed one of the key topics of this month's webinar - tariffs - and began by examining the latest US visitor statistics, which had been published at the end of the previous week. (Preliminary, so subject to change).

\n\n
\n

 

\n

Oliver gave his thoughts on how much impact tariffs and evolving tariff policies will have on consumers' travel decisions:

\n
\n

Geopolitics and aviation

\n

In the last two months alone the industry has been impacted by a number of geopolitical events, including the escalating tensions between Israel and Iran which resulted in the closure of airspace in a number of neighbouring countries.

\n

Whilst the industry navigates unpredictable events such as short-notice airspace closures, and makes decisions about whether to fly to areas where conflict may escalate, what is the lasting impact on consumer sentiment and decisions to fly?

\n
\n

TOURISM TARGETS

\n

With 5 years to go until the end of the decade, a flurry of new 2030 tourism targets have been announced this year. The panel gave their thoughts:

\n
\n

What next?

\n

Having just spent 7 years leading the research team at Visit Florida, Jacob gave an insightful round-up to summarise the panel discussion:

\n
\n

 

\n
\n

Watch the full webinar below

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

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For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Oliver Martin (Senior Director, Skift Inc) and Jacob Pewitt Yancey (Head of Analytics, Arrivalist) to dive into the latest global tourism trends.

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n
\n

A look at growth trends

\n

The panel began by starting at the top and looking at global growth trends:

\n\n
\n

Tariff impacts

\n

Next, the panel discussed one of the key topics of this month's webinar - tariffs - and began by examining the latest US visitor statistics, which had been published at the end of the previous week. (Preliminary, so subject to change).

\n\n
\n

 

\n

Oliver gave his thoughts on how much impact tariffs and evolving tariff policies will have on consumers' travel decisions:

\n
\n

Geopolitics and aviation

\n

In the last two months alone the industry has been impacted by a number of geopolitical events, including the escalating tensions between Israel and Iran which resulted in the closure of airspace in a number of neighbouring countries.

\n

Whilst the industry navigates unpredictable events such as short-notice airspace closures, and makes decisions about whether to fly to areas where conflict may escalate, what is the lasting impact on consumer sentiment and decisions to fly?

\n
\n

TOURISM TARGETS

\n

With 5 years to go until the end of the decade, a flurry of new 2030 tourism targets have been announced this year. The panel gave their thoughts:

\n
\n

What next?

\n

Having just spent 7 years leading the research team at Visit Florida, Jacob gave an insightful round-up to summarise the panel discussion:

\n
\n

 

\n
\n

Watch the full webinar below

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","postBodyRss":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Oliver Martin (Senior Director, Skift Inc) and Jacob Pewitt Yancey (Head of Analytics, Arrivalist) to dive into the latest global tourism trends.

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n
\n

A look at growth trends

\n

The panel began by starting at the top and looking at global growth trends:

\n\n
\n

Tariff impacts

\n

Next, the panel discussed one of the key topics of this month's webinar - tariffs - and began by examining the latest US visitor statistics, which had been published at the end of the previous week. (Preliminary, so subject to change).

\n\n
\n

 

\n

Oliver gave his thoughts on how much impact tariffs and evolving tariff policies will have on consumers' travel decisions:

\n
\n

Geopolitics and aviation

\n

In the last two months alone the industry has been impacted by a number of geopolitical events, including the escalating tensions between Israel and Iran which resulted in the closure of airspace in a number of neighbouring countries.

\n

Whilst the industry navigates unpredictable events such as short-notice airspace closures, and makes decisions about whether to fly to areas where conflict may escalate, what is the lasting impact on consumer sentiment and decisions to fly?

\n
\n

TOURISM TARGETS

\n

With 5 years to go until the end of the decade, a flurry of new 2030 tourism targets have been announced this year. The panel gave their thoughts:

\n
\n

What next?

\n

Having just spent 7 years leading the research team at Visit Florida, Jacob gave an insightful round-up to summarise the panel discussion:

\n
\n

 

\n
\n

Watch the full webinar below

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","postEmailContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Oliver Martin (Senior Director, Skift Inc) and Jacob Pewitt Yancey (Head of Analytics, Arrivalist) to dive into the latest global tourism trends.

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n
\n

A look at growth trends

\n

The panel began by starting at the top and looking at global growth trends:

\n\n
\n

Tariff impacts

\n

Next, the panel discussed one of the key topics of this month's webinar - tariffs - and began by examining the latest US visitor statistics, which had been published at the end of the previous week. (Preliminary, so subject to change).

\n\n
\n

 

\n

Oliver gave his thoughts on how much impact tariffs and evolving tariff policies will have on consumers' travel decisions:

\n
\n

Geopolitics and aviation

\n

In the last two months alone the industry has been impacted by a number of geopolitical events, including the escalating tensions between Israel and Iran which resulted in the closure of airspace in a number of neighbouring countries.

\n

Whilst the industry navigates unpredictable events such as short-notice airspace closures, and makes decisions about whether to fly to areas where conflict may escalate, what is the lasting impact on consumer sentiment and decisions to fly?

\n
\n

TOURISM TARGETS

\n

With 5 years to go until the end of the decade, a flurry of new 2030 tourism targets have been announced this year. The panel gave their thoughts:

\n
\n

What next?

\n

Having just spent 7 years leading the research team at Visit Florida, Jacob gave an insightful round-up to summarise the panel discussion:

\n
\n

 

\n
\n

Watch the full webinar below

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://490937.fs1.hubspotusercontent-na1.net/hubfs/490937/June%202025%20webinar%20featured%20pic.jpg","postListContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Oliver Martin (Senior Director, Skift Inc) and Jacob Pewitt Yancey (Head of Analytics, Arrivalist) to dive into the latest global tourism trends.

","postListSummaryFeaturedImage":"https://490937.fs1.hubspotusercontent-na1.net/hubfs/490937/June%202025%20webinar%20featured%20pic.jpg","postRssContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Oliver Martin (Senior Director, Skift Inc) and Jacob Pewitt Yancey (Head of Analytics, Arrivalist) to dive into the latest global tourism trends.

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n
\n

A look at growth trends

\n

The panel began by starting at the top and looking at global growth trends:

\n\n
\n

Tariff impacts

\n

Next, the panel discussed one of the key topics of this month's webinar - tariffs - and began by examining the latest US visitor statistics, which had been published at the end of the previous week. (Preliminary, so subject to change).

\n\n
\n

 

\n

Oliver gave his thoughts on how much impact tariffs and evolving tariff policies will have on consumers' travel decisions:

\n
\n

Geopolitics and aviation

\n

In the last two months alone the industry has been impacted by a number of geopolitical events, including the escalating tensions between Israel and Iran which resulted in the closure of airspace in a number of neighbouring countries.

\n

Whilst the industry navigates unpredictable events such as short-notice airspace closures, and makes decisions about whether to fly to areas where conflict may escalate, what is the lasting impact on consumer sentiment and decisions to fly?

\n
\n

TOURISM TARGETS

\n

With 5 years to go until the end of the decade, a flurry of new 2030 tourism targets have been announced this year. The panel gave their thoughts:

\n
\n

What next?

\n

Having just spent 7 years leading the research team at Visit Florida, Jacob gave an insightful round-up to summarise the panel discussion:

\n
\n

 

\n
\n

Watch the full webinar below

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

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

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Oliver Martin (Senior Director, Skift Inc) and Jacob Pewitt Yancey (Head of Analytics, Arrivalist) to dive into the latest global tourism trends.

\n","postSummaryRss":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Oliver Martin (Senior Director, Skift Inc) and Jacob Pewitt Yancey (Head of Analytics, Arrivalist) to dive into the latest global tourism trends.

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For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Oliver Martin (Senior Director, Skift Inc) and Jacob Pewitt Yancey (Head of Analytics, Arrivalist) to dive into the latest global tourism trends.

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n
\n

A look at growth trends

\n

The panel began by starting at the top and looking at global growth trends:

\n\n
\n

Tariff impacts

\n

Next, the panel discussed one of the key topics of this month's webinar - tariffs - and began by examining the latest US visitor statistics, which had been published at the end of the previous week. (Preliminary, so subject to change).

\n\n
\n

 

\n

Oliver gave his thoughts on how much impact tariffs and evolving tariff policies will have on consumers' travel decisions:

\n
\n

Geopolitics and aviation

\n

In the last two months alone the industry has been impacted by a number of geopolitical events, including the escalating tensions between Israel and Iran which resulted in the closure of airspace in a number of neighbouring countries.

\n

Whilst the industry navigates unpredictable events such as short-notice airspace closures, and makes decisions about whether to fly to areas where conflict may escalate, what is the lasting impact on consumer sentiment and decisions to fly?

\n
\n

TOURISM TARGETS

\n

With 5 years to go until the end of the decade, a flurry of new 2030 tourism targets have been announced this year. The panel gave their thoughts:

\n
\n

What next?

\n

Having just spent 7 years leading the research team at Visit Florida, Jacob gave an insightful round-up to summarise the panel discussion:

\n
\n

 

\n
\n

Watch the full webinar below

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n

EMBEDDED CTA - Webinar list (5)

","rssSummary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Oliver Martin (Senior Director, Skift Inc) and Jacob Pewitt Yancey (Head of Analytics, Arrivalist) to dive into the latest global tourism trends.

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For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Siddharth Narkhede, Head of Airline Analysis at Ishka, to investigate the current operating environment for airlines.

\n","post_body":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Siddharth Narkhede, Head of Airline Analysis at Ishka, to investigate the current operating environment for airlines.

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n
\n

A look at growth trends

\n

As usual, the panel began by starting at the top and looking at global growth trends before moving on to this month's subject matter:

\n\n
\n

It's a narrowbody world

\n

Next, the panel examined the current composition of capacity from an aircraft group type perspective, grouping current operations into five categories.

\n\n
\n

How will today's orders shape tomorrow's fleets?

\n

Next, the panel looked forward to analyse what is on order as of now, across the same fleet categories:

\n\n
\n

Infrastructure bottlenecks

\n

Next, the panel discussed some of the key infrastructure investment challenges emerging, citing ATC as a key example:

\n
\n

Watch the webinar in full here:

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n
\n","rss_summary":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Siddharth Narkhede, Head of Airline Analysis at Ishka, to investigate the current operating environment for airlines.

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For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Siddharth Narkhede, Head of Airline Analysis at Ishka, to investigate the current operating environment for airlines.

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n
\n

A look at growth trends

\n

As usual, the panel began by starting at the top and looking at global growth trends before moving on to this month's subject matter:

\n\n
\n

It's a narrowbody world

\n

Next, the panel examined the current composition of capacity from an aircraft group type perspective, grouping current operations into five categories.

\n\n
\n

How will today's orders shape tomorrow's fleets?

\n

Next, the panel looked forward to analyse what is on order as of now, across the same fleet categories:

\n\n
\n

Infrastructure bottlenecks

\n

Next, the panel discussed some of the key infrastructure investment challenges emerging, citing ATC as a key example:

\n
\n

Watch the webinar in full here:

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n
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For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Siddharth Narkhede, Head of Airline Analysis at Ishka, to investigate the current operating environment for airlines.

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n
\n

A look at growth trends

\n

As usual, the panel began by starting at the top and looking at global growth trends before moving on to this month's subject matter:

\n\n
\n

It's a narrowbody world

\n

Next, the panel examined the current composition of capacity from an aircraft group type perspective, grouping current operations into five categories.

\n\n
\n

How will today's orders shape tomorrow's fleets?

\n

Next, the panel looked forward to analyse what is on order as of now, across the same fleet categories:

\n\n
\n

Infrastructure bottlenecks

\n

Next, the panel discussed some of the key infrastructure investment challenges emerging, citing ATC as a key example:

\n
\n

Watch the webinar in full here:

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n
\n","postBodyRss":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Siddharth Narkhede, Head of Airline Analysis at Ishka, to investigate the current operating environment for airlines.

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n
\n

A look at growth trends

\n

As usual, the panel began by starting at the top and looking at global growth trends before moving on to this month's subject matter:

\n\n
\n

It's a narrowbody world

\n

Next, the panel examined the current composition of capacity from an aircraft group type perspective, grouping current operations into five categories.

\n\n
\n

How will today's orders shape tomorrow's fleets?

\n

Next, the panel looked forward to analyse what is on order as of now, across the same fleet categories:

\n\n
\n

Infrastructure bottlenecks

\n

Next, the panel discussed some of the key infrastructure investment challenges emerging, citing ATC as a key example:

\n
\n

Watch the webinar in full here:

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n
\n","postEmailContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Siddharth Narkhede, Head of Airline Analysis at Ishka, to investigate the current operating environment for airlines.

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n
\n

A look at growth trends

\n

As usual, the panel began by starting at the top and looking at global growth trends before moving on to this month's subject matter:

\n\n
\n

It's a narrowbody world

\n

Next, the panel examined the current composition of capacity from an aircraft group type perspective, grouping current operations into five categories.

\n\n
\n

How will today's orders shape tomorrow's fleets?

\n

Next, the panel looked forward to analyse what is on order as of now, across the same fleet categories:

\n\n
\n

Infrastructure bottlenecks

\n

Next, the panel discussed some of the key infrastructure investment challenges emerging, citing ATC as a key example:

\n
\n

Watch the webinar in full here:

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n
\n","postFeaturedImageIfEnabled":"https://www.oag.com/hubfs/May%202025%20webinar%20featured%20image.jpg","postListContent":"

For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Siddharth Narkhede, Head of Airline Analysis at Ishka, to investigate the current operating environment for airlines.

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For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Siddharth Narkhede, Head of Airline Analysis at Ishka, to investigate the current operating environment for airlines.

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n
\n

A look at growth trends

\n

As usual, the panel began by starting at the top and looking at global growth trends before moving on to this month's subject matter:

\n\n
\n

It's a narrowbody world

\n

Next, the panel examined the current composition of capacity from an aircraft group type perspective, grouping current operations into five categories.

\n\n
\n

How will today's orders shape tomorrow's fleets?

\n

Next, the panel looked forward to analyse what is on order as of now, across the same fleet categories:

\n\n
\n

Infrastructure bottlenecks

\n

Next, the panel discussed some of the key infrastructure investment challenges emerging, citing ATC as a key example:

\n
\n

Watch the webinar in full here:

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n
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For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Siddharth Narkhede, Head of Airline Analysis at Ishka, to investigate the current operating environment for airlines.

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For this month's aviation industry webinar, Deirdre Fulton and John Grant were joined by Siddharth Narkhede, Head of Airline Analysis at Ishka, to investigate the current operating environment for airlines.

\n\n

The live panel discussed:

\n\n
\n

A look at growth trends

\n

As usual, the panel began by starting at the top and looking at global growth trends before moving on to this month's subject matter:

\n\n
\n

It's a narrowbody world

\n

Next, the panel examined the current composition of capacity from an aircraft group type perspective, grouping current operations into five categories.

\n\n
\n

How will today's orders shape tomorrow's fleets?

\n

Next, the panel looked forward to analyse what is on order as of now, across the same fleet categories:

\n\n
\n

Infrastructure bottlenecks

\n

Next, the panel discussed some of the key infrastructure investment challenges emerging, citing ATC as a key example:

\n
\n

Watch the webinar in full here:

\n
\n

 

\n

DOWNLOAD THE SLIDE DECK

\n
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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","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","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

 

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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. 

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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

 

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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. 

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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. 

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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. 

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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.

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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

","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.

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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.

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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":"

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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.

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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":"

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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.

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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":"

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

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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.

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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\".

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Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

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

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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

 

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New call-to-action

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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
 
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New call-to-action

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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.

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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
 
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New call-to-action

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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

","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

","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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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

","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

","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!

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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
 
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\"OAG-On-Air-Podcast\"

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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

 

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\"OAG-On-Air-Podcast\"

\n

New call-to-action

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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!

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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!

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Fasten your seat belt, sit back and tune in!

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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!

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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!

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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
 
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\"OAG-On-Air-Podcast\"

\n

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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!

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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PUNCTUALITY LEAGUE 2019

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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.

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