'This year is very difficult. The oil crisis is rising and the demand is falling,' said IATA's director general and CEO Giovanni Bisignani (left). -- PHOTO: REUTERS
HANOI - DEMAND for air travel continued to slow in Aug as the sector endures a 'perfect storm' of rising fuel costs and the global financial crisis, an industry group said on Tuesday in Hanoi.
Passenger load factors fell to 79.2 per cent from the 81 per cent recorded over the same period last year as capacity growth outpaced demand, according to figures from the International Air Transport Association (IATA).
'This year is very difficult. The oil crisis is rising and the demand is falling,' said Mr Giovanni Bisignani, IATA's director general and CEO.
Over the past few months, the slowdown has been so sudden 'that airlines can't adjust capacity quickly enough,' Mr Bisignani said.
Air freight has declined for the past three months, led by Asia Pacific carriers posting a 6.5 per cent decline in Jul and a 6.8 per cent decline in Aug, the association said.
'The three-month decline, led by weakness in Asia-Pacific markets, is a clear indication that global trade is slowing down. This shows that the impact of the financial crisis is broad geographically and will worsen before it gets better,' Mr Bisignani said.
IATA members made a profit of US$5.6 billion (S$8 billion) last year after six consecutive years of loss of more than US$40 billion.
But 'with traffic growth continuing to decline, the industry is still heading for a 5.2 billion dollars loss this year, Mr Bisignani said. -- AFP