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Asia leads global travel growth

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Asia leads the world’s growth in travel and holds seven out of the ten busiest inter-city routes. In addition to the Bric markets, Indonesia, the Philippines and Chile showed an impressive growth, according to analysis by the market intelligence solution Amadeus Total Demand.

The review looks at trends in worldwide passenger demand between regions, countries and specific airports, comparing the full 2011 passenger volumes with 2010 data.

All figures relate to outbound passengers travelling between a given origin and final destination airport, irrespective of the number of connecting stops.

The most important inter-regional growth patterns of last year are led by Asia. Traffic between Asia and Europe, and between Asia and North America, grew by nine per cent. Traffic between Asia and the Middle East grew six per cent reaching 38 million travellers in the year. Compared with the previous year, two per cent fewer passengers travelled between Africa and Europe in 2011; this was the only region pair with a significant traffic flow decrease over the period.

Traffic between North America and Europe remains the busiest inter-regional flow at a global scale with over 60 million passengers in 2011, followed by Asia and Europe with over 53 million, and Latin America and North America with 47 million passengers.

The 2011 country statistics reveal, unsurprisingly, that the strongest growth in absolute passengers is led by the Bric countries. China registered an additional 19 million in 2011 than 2010, Brazil, 12 million, India eight million and Russia six million. Indonesia was the fifth strongest growth market with an additional five million passengers in 2011.

Brazil (17 per cent), India (13 per cent) and Russia (15 per cent) also featured in the top ten fastest-growing countries by percentage growth. Chile (21 per cent), the Philippines (15 per cent) and Indonesia (11 per cent) are also among the fastest growing travel markets. Egypt and Japan are among the fastest shrinking markets, probably due to the Arab Spring and the Tsunami.

Regionally, Saudi Arabia took giant strides towards tourism prominence. The analysis see growth figures of the Kingdom reach 15 per cent in 2011, putting Saudi Arabia amongst the top five countries showing highest percentage growth in passengers between 2010 and 2011. Another regional player is the UAE, who achieved 10 per cent growth in visitor departures in 2011, securing a place in the top 15 fastest-growing countries by percentage growth.

It is interesting to note that the strongest traffic in between cities takes place within the same country. From the world’s top ten inter-city routes, seven are within the domestic borders of Asian countries, out of which three are in Japan. In terms of volume, the route between Jeju and Seoul is the most important (almost 10 million passengers) followed by Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo (circa eight million passengers).

In the Middle East region, while the volumes are smaller, the following trends can be highlighted:

• growing traffic in Middle Eastern inter-city routes rose predominantly between Dubai and Jeddah, followed by Dubai – Doha. Busiest routes with other regions are London-Dubai and Bombay-Dubai.

• Increased traffic to and from Jeddah with other regions was registered, a growth certainly supported by religious travel.

'The weight of the region in terms of tourism potential is increasing very fast. The Middle East is confirming its prime position towards becoming one of the most prominent travel hubs in the world. This is mainly due to its infrastructures, its strategic location as well as a strong commitment and vision by the region’s rulers. We at Amadeus are committed to continue supporting the travel sector growth in this part of the world and beyond. Analysing and sharing key trends is a critical step for us to ensure that provided technology solutions meet the industry needs and enable its players to gain competitive edge' says Antoine Medawar, vice president, Mena, Amadeus.

Amadeus Total Demand is able to provide detailed demand data for any origin and destination pair in the world. Data is mined from a large number of sources including commercial and government airline and airport traffic statistics as well as major GDSs and processed by a cutting edge computing algorithm to ensure the highest accuracy of results.

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