Passenger traffic increase at London Gatwick

2013-04-12 — /travelprnews.com/ — Passenger traffic increase at London Gatwick

  • Passenger traffic up by 2.5% compared with March 2012
  • Traffic for the 12 months ended 31 March 2013 increased by 1.2% taking the total annual passenger numbers to 34.2 million

 

March 2013 traffic performance summary

 

Month Moving Annual Total
Growth Apr-12 Apr-11 Growth
Mar-13 Mar-12 (%) Mar-13 Mar-12 (%)
Total terminal passengers (000s) 2,576.3 2,513.9 2.5% 34,241.2 33,818.6 1.2%
Market Analysis:
UK + Channel Islands 310.9 308.0 0.9% 3,844.2 3,760.1 2.2%
Ireland 105.0 108.1 (2.9)% 1,274.3 1,300.7 (2.0)%
European scheduled 1,334.9 1,309.5 1.9% 18,495.4 17,788.6 4.0%
European charter 250.6 241.2 3.9% 4,074.6 4,570.1 (10.8)%
North Atlantic 128.3 134.4 (4.5)% 1,827.7 1,963.6 (6.9)%
Other long haul 446.5 412.6 8.2% 4,725.2 4,435.4 6.5%
Air transport movements 17,917 18,423 (2.7)% 238,351 242,498 (1.7)%
Cargo (metric tonnes) 8,544 8,539 0.1% 99,736 88,182 13.1%

Traffic commentary for March 2013

London Gatwick served over 2.5 million passengers during March, up by 2.5% on the prior year and the highest traffic figures seen in March for five years, with the sustained cold weather and the earlier start to the Easter getaway contributing to the growth in traffic this month.

There was 5.1% growth in traffic to long haul markets with 27,800 more passengers travelling to destinations across Asia, Africa and the Caribbean. Following several months of decline, European scheduled traffic was up 1.9% (25,400 more passengers) and European charter traffic was up 3.9% (9,400 more passengers).

Gatwick’s load factors, which show how full the average flight was, reached a record for the month at 83.1% – up 3.2% on the prior year. Historically, load factors at this level have not been seen outside of the busy summer season.

Overview of the 12 months ending 31 March 2013

In spite of continuing tough economic conditions, full year traffic grew by 1.2% taking the total number of passengers handled by Gatwick in 2012-13 to 34.2 million passengers – up from 33.8 million in the prior year.

Growth was achieved through:

  • Incumbent airlines such as easyJet, British Airways and Norwegian Air Shuttle growing frequencies on existing routes and with higher load factors.
  • New airlines operating out of Gatwick including Air China, Air Arabia Maroc, Iraqi Airways, Icelandair, WOW Air, Caribbean Airlines, Vueling and Gambia Bird.
  • New routes being opened, including easyJet flying to Moscow, Norwegian Air Shuttle opening the first of 12 new routes, and British Airways increasing its services in Europe and the Caribbean.

Conversely, and reflecting the real competition in the market, some airlines reduced services or ceased to operate at Gatwick; Ryanair withdrew all non-Irish routes, Korean Air consolidated winter services at Heathrow after renewed competition from BA, Adria Airways relocated to Luton and, more recently, Air Moldova moved operations to Stansted.

During the course of the year, Gatwick continued its £1.2 billion transformation of the airport which included the completion of the North Terminal baggage handling project and the opening of Europe’s largest World Duty Free store in South Terminal. On the airfield, the world’s busiest runway was resurfaced while maintaining business-as-usual operations and Gatwick’s new pier-served A380 stand was officially opened.

Stewart Wingate, Gatwick Airport’s Chief Executive, said:

This year Gatwick has continued to compete with other London airports in attracting more passengers, new airlines and new routes. Through our continuing investment in the airport and relentless focus on improving the passenger experience we have seen traffic figures rise despite the backdrop of tough economic conditions at home and abroad. We have seen existing airlines like easyJet, British Airways and Norwegian Air Shuttle grow and new airlines arrive, opening up even more choice and connectivity for passengers.

“Today, passengers can fly direct to Beijing, Istanbul, Moscow and Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi in Vietnam from Gatwick. Later this year, we will be opening up the country’s first direct route to Jakarta in Indonesia. This is important in the context of ensuring the UK has the international connectivity it needs to remain globally competitive. We will continue into this next financial year with the same drive and focus to create a world-class airport.”

Notes to Editors 

For media relations information, please contact:

Sarah Baranowski, 01293 505000 / sarah.baranowski@gatwickairport.com

For investor relations information, please contact:

Jeff Naested, 01293 502597 / jeff.naested@gatwickairport.com

 

For more information contact:

Gatwick Airport press office

t: + 44 (0) 1293 505000
e: gatwickmedia@gatwickairport.com

 

About Gatwick Airport

Gatwick Airport is the UK’s second largest airport and the busiest single-runway airport in the world. It serves around 200 destinations in 90 countries for around 34 million passengers a year on short- and long-haul point-to-point services. It is also a major economic driver for the South-East region, generating around 23,000 on-airport jobs and a further 13,000 jobs through related activities. The airport is 28 miles south of London with excellent public transport links, including the Gatwick Express. Gatwick Airport is owned by a group of international investment funds, of which Global Infrastructure Partners is the largest shareholder.

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