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India's air passenger traffic surges by 21% in May'16 as against May'15: IATA

Domestic traffic outpaced international demand by 0.8%, as it rose to 5.1%.

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India continued its dominant position in the domestic travel demand for the 14th consecutive month
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Continuing its dominant position in the domestic travel demand for the 14th consecutive month, India's air passenger traffic surged 21% in May over the corresponding period of last year.

Demand for domestic traffic rose 5.1%, outpacing international demand growth of 4.3% in May 2016 according to the data released by International Air Traffic Association (IATA). As against this India's domestic air traffic grew 21%, it said.

The overall traffic growth (domestic and international), however, rose 4.6% in May this year over May 2015 with the demand getting impacted due to recent terrorist strikes and UK's decision to opt out of the European Union. "After a very strong start to the year, demand growth is slipping back toward more historic levels. A combination of factors is likely behind this more moderated pace of demand growth. These include continuing terrorist activity and the fragile state of the global economy. Neither bode well for travel demand. And the shocks of Istanbul and the economic fallout of the Brexit vote make it difficult to see an early uptick," IATA Director General and Chief Executive Officer Tony Tyler said.

India, which is the fastest growing aviation market currently, had logged 21.8% growth in domestic traffic in April, 2016.

"India's domestic traffic soared 21.8%, marking the 20th month of double-digit traffic growth and the 13th consecutive month it has led the domestic markets," IATA had said at the time of releasing traffic data for April.

For Asia-Pacific carriers, the large markets in India, China and Japan mean that domestic travel accounts for 45% of the region's operations, IATA said. Significantly, India accounts for only 1.2% of the total domestic air traffic. "The shockwaves of the Brexit vote have extended worldwide and the fallout will affect the air transport industry, from both economic and regulatory perspectives," Tyler said.

Aviation plays a vital role in supporting economic growth and development, he said adding as the post-Brexit regulatory framework is negotiated between the EU and the UK it is critical that there are no steps backward for aviation connectivity. IATA represents nearly 265 airlines, comprising 83% of global air traffic. 
 

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