…The top five airports in terms of the number of passengers in the first half of 2018 were Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Kano, and Owerri.
MON, SEPT 10 2018-theG&BJournal-The total number of passengers who passed through Nigerian airports dropped significantly in the second quarter 2018 amidst performance deficit of the country’s airline industry.
The industry performance statistic published today by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed a significant drop from the first quarter performance of 3,845,853, a 33.51% year-on-year growth from the same quarter of 2017 to 3,657,555 in the second quarter of 2018 – a smaller year-on-year growth of 15.24% from the same quarter in 2017. This is an overall there 4.9% decline in passengers for Q2 2018 when compared to the preceding quarter.
The report included total aircraft traffic, air cargo traffic via Lagos and Abuja for both Q1 2018 and Q2 2018.
Total aircraft traffic declined year-on-year for both Q1 (1.48%) and Q2 (10.17%) when compared to the corresponding quarter in 2017. In the first half of 2018, aircraft traffic totalled 96,659, a 5.9% decline from total aircrafts recorded in the same period last year.
‘’A significant year-on-year decline in air cargo traffic via Lagos for both Q1 2018 (49.8%) and Q2 2018 (65.4%), led to an overall year on year decline of 37.8% for the first half of the year,’’ according to NBS.
However, a growth of 25.6% was recorded between Q2 2018 (28,920,555 aircrafts) and the preceding quarter. Similarly, there was a 34.2% increase in total mail traffic recorded in the first half of 2018 when compared to the same period last year.
In total, 7,503,408 passengers passed through Nigerian airports in the first half of 2018, this is a 23.9% growth from the 6,054,319 passengers recorded in the first half of 2017. This significant growth in both the first and second quarters of 2018 was mainly driven by the increased passenger traffic through Abuja airports, compared with the same period in 2017 when the Abuja airport was closed during the period for runway improvements. There was also a boost in passenger traffic in March 2018 when total air passenger was recorded at 1,721,224 (797,608 arrivals and 923,616 departures), a 62% jump from the average passenger traffic from the previous two months (January & February 2018).
The total number of air passengers declined in the second quarter of 2018 from the first quarter by 4.90%, standing at 3,657,555. Nevertheless, the recorded total passenger in Q2 indicates a robust year-on-year growth (of 15.24%) from the same quarter in the last year.
Of the 7,503,408 total passengers (arrival and departures) recorded in the first half of 2018, which 27.59% (5,433,145 passengers) traversed through the nation’s international airports and 72.41% (2,070,263) through the various domestic airports. Lagos and Abuja’s international and domestic airports accounted for 73.4% of total air traffic passengers in Q2 2018, a decline in their combined market share in Q1 2018 (77.9%) but an increase in combined market share over the same period last year (Q2 2017).
In the first quarter of 2018, 2,779,455 passengers travelled through domestic airports (72.3% of total travel), and 1,066,398 through the international airports (27.7% of total travel), representing a growth of 4.99% and 5.30% respectively compared to the previous quarter (Q4 2017). Similarly, in the second quarter of 2018, 2,653,690 passengers travelled through domestic airports (72.6% of total travel), and 1,003,865 through the international airports (27.4% of total travel), representing a decline of 4.52% and 5.86% respectively, compared to Q1 2018.
This underpins the slower growth in passenger traffic in the first half of the year when compared with the second half of the previous year, but the robust growth in domestic passenger travel (27.4%) and international passenger travel (15.7%) when compared with the same period last year.
The first quarter of 2018 saw departures, recorded at 1,969,883, grow by 9.74% from departures recorded in Q4 2017 at 1,795,095, and by 34.98% compared to the same quarter in 2017. This figure dropped to 1,837,002 in Q2 2018, a 6.75% decline from the previous quarter (Q1 2018), but a robust growth of 14.76% from the same quarter last year (Q2 2017).
The number of passengers at arrival has remained relatively stable since 2017 Q3. The first two quarters of 2018 recorded 1,875,970 and 1,820,553 air passengers arriving at Nigerian airports respectively. Although the number of passengers at arrival declined in Q2 2018 from Q1 2018 by 2.95%, both the reviewing quarters saw significant year-on-year growth from the corresponding quarters in 2017 (32.01% and 15.73% respectively).
The top five airports in Nigeria in terms of the number of passengers who passed through in the first half of 2018 were Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Kano, and Owerri. These five airports served over 89.39% of total passengers (6,707,195 in number) in the first two quarters of 2018.
Lagos Murtala Muhammed International Airport remained the busiest airport in Nigeria for both international and domestic travellers, and it served 3,527,851 passengers (or 48.71% of total air passengers) in the first half of the year (1,972,997 in Q1 and 1,564,854 in Q2). Among the over 3.5 million air passengers who passed through Lagos airport in the first half of 2018, 41.8% or 1,478,738 were international passengers, and 58.2% or 2,059,113 were domestic passengers. In the first quarter of 2018, domestic air passengers who passed through Lagos airport (1,174,943) reached the highest point since the beginning of 2017, and this number declined to 884,170 in the second quarter a decline of 24.75%, although this figure still represented a 2.89% growth from the same period in 2017 (Q2).
Abuja Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, the second largest airport in Nigeria, served 2,140,452 (29.5% of total air passengers) in the first half of 2018 (1,021,906 in Q1 2018, and 1,118,546 in Q2 2018). During this period (HY 2018), 80% of the passengers who travelled through the Abuja airport were domestic passengers, while 20% were travelling internationally.
While the total number of air passengers travelling through Nigerian airports recorded an aggregate increase in the first two quarters of 2018, the total number of aircraft movements declined within the same periods by an aggregate of 5.9%. Air craft movement recorded in the Q1 2018 (49,497) declined by 13.89% on a quarter-on-quarter basis and by 1.48% on a year-on-year basis. Among the 49,497 aircraft movement in Q1, 83.31% were flying on domestic routes, and 16.69% were flying international routes. The decline in aircraft movement and increase in numbers of air passengers highlight improvements in efficiency within the air transportation sector.
The declining trend in aircraft movement continued in the second quarter of 2018, with the total number of aircraft movement being recorded at 47,162. This was a further decline of 4.72% from Q1 this year and of 10.17% from the same quarter last year. Notably, aircraft movement continued to decline in the second quarter even as the number of air passengers grew within the period when compared to the same period last year (Q2 2017), indicating sustained improvements in efficiency through the first half of 2018. Port Harcourt, Kano, and Owerri airports which recorded 520,930 (7.2%), 261,355 (3.6%), and 246,607 (3.4%) in the first two quarters of 2018 round up the top airports for passenger traffic during the first half of 2018.
The first two quarters of 2018 recorded a total of 23,023,291 KG and 28,920,555 KG cargo movement respectively through Nigerian airports, an aggregate 37.8% decline from the same quarters last year (HY 2017). The first quarter in 2018 continued the decreasing trend of cargo movement from previous quarters, as the total cargo movement within the quarter declined by 31.12% on a quarter-on-quarter basis, and by 44.47% compared to the same period last year (Q1 2017). In Q2 2018, the weight of cargo movement recovered and increased by 25.61% on a quarter-on-quarter basis, but still declined by 31.21% when compared to the same period last year (Q2 2017).
In the first quarter of 2018, unloaded cargo accounted for 36.41% of all cargo recorded, while loaded cargo accounted for 63% of all cargo. In contrast, unloaded cargo accounted for 51.52% of total cargo accounted for in the second quarter of 2018, while loaded cargo for the same quarter stood at 48.48% of total cargo.
This represented a 77.7% increase in unloaded cargo weight recorded in Q2 2018 (14,639,528 KG) from the figure recorded in Q1 2018 (8,383,763 KG).