Airlines In The Region Enjoying Second Highest Traffic Growth
In The World
According to the recently released Airbus Global Market Forecast
(GMF), Latin America will require 2,028 new passenger aircraft of
more than 100 seats between today and 2030, including 1,653
single-aisle, 334 twin-aisle and 41 very large aircraft and
estimated at $197 billion. At a time when the global economy is
trying to stabilize, Latin America's GDP is growing faster than the
world at an average annual rate of 5 percent, while the region's
middle class is expected to surge 75 percent in the next 20
years.
Latin American airline traffic will follow suit, growing more
than 6 percent per year in the next 20 years, the second highest
growth rate in the world after the Middle East and before Asia
Pacific. Overall, the region's traffic is expected to triple in the
next 20 years. Intraregional and domestic traffic in Latin America
is predicted to rise 6.6 percent in the next 10 years, a faster
rate than the 5.4 percent world average. Europe and North America
will remain the most important long-haul markets for the region and
are expected to reach a share of 31 percent and 25 percent
respectively by 2030, while interregional and domestic traffic will
dominate market share at 35 percent.
"Latin America's aviation sector has boomed in the last five
years and as a result it has never been stronger. Economic growth
is enabling the rise of a new travelling middle class," said Rafael
Alonso, Executive Vice President of Airbus for Latin American and
the Caribbean. "The region is also setting global standards by
flying some of the youngest aircraft in the world average and
advocating for the environment via aviation bio-fuel efforts that
are both commercially viable and environmentally sustainable."
To date, market forecasts have been released for Brazil, Mexico
and Colombia. Highlights include:
Brazil, the largest and fastest growing market for Airbus in
Latin America, will require 701 new passenger aircraft of more than
100 seats between today and 2030. The 501 single-aisle, 174
twin-aisle aircraft and 26 very large aircraft have an estimated
value of $82 billion. In the past decade, the country's
international and domestic air travel more than doubled, and in the
next 20 years GDP will skyrocket 144 percent, 20 percent higher
than regional average.
Mexico will need 412 new passenger aircraft of more than 100
seats between today and 2030. The 371 single-aisle and 41
twin-aisle aircraft forecasted have an estimated market value of
$30.5 billion. Considered one of the biggest metropolitan areas of
the world based on population growth, international traffic to and
from Mexico City grew by almost 90 percent in the last decade.
Colombia has a demand for 135 new passenger aircraft of more
than 100 seats between today and 2030. The 102 single-aisle and 33
twin-aisle aircraft have an estimated value of $13.7 billion. The
country's domestic air traffic grew nearly 80 percent in the past
10 years and international traffic to and from Colombia more than
doubled between 2003 and 2011. Colombia's fleet with more than 100
seats is also among the youngest in the world with an average age
of four years, six years younger than the Latin American and world
average.
Airbus claims over 400 aircraft in operation throughout Latin
America and the Caribbean. In the last 10 years, Airbus says it has
tripled its in-service fleet, while delivering more than 60 percent
of all aircraft operating in the region.