Capacity is rebuilding in many parts of the Asia Pacific and Middle East regionDomestic passenger traffic has made considerable progressInternational traffic remained largely stagnant due to ongoing travel restrictions in major marketsCargo growth has proven to be resilient and is above pre-pandemic levelsDespite some improvements, the financial health of airports in the region remains challengingAirports in the region continue to provide a safe and high service quality
Hong Kong, May 26, 2022: Asia-Pacific and the Middle East aviation industry is experiencing green shoots of recovery, according to the first
edition of the Airport Industry Outlook, a quarterly report by Airports Council International Asia-Pacific (ACI APAC).
The report, developed in partnership with Mott MacDonald — a global engineering, management and development consultancy—
provides a snapshot of how airports in the region have performed during the first quarter of 2022 (Jan to March). This
analysis also sheds light on two recuring themes which are currently impacting the industry — COVID-19 pandemic and the
geo-political conflict.
Overview
The industry showed encouraging signs of recovery in the first quarter of 2022— capacity was rebuilding in many parts of
Asia Pacific and Middle East region; domestic passenger traffic made considerable progress; cargo growth has proven to
be resilient and is above pre-pandemic levels. Despite the subdued pandemic environment, airports in the region
continued to provide a safe and high service quality for the benefit of their passengers.
However, travel restrictions ranging from mandatory quarantines in designated facilities to pre-departure testing and
on-arrival; suspension of international air travel in some parts of the region; geopolitical conflict and subsequent
impacts on macroeconomic factors have proved to be detrimental to the overall growth of aviation.
“Analysis shows that travel restrictions have to a large degree failed to prevent the spread of COVID-19 mainly due to
the high infectious nature of the omicron variant and have turned out to be a deterrent for the recovery of aviation,
impacting the economy of the region. Cargo business proves on the contrary the leading role that Asia-Pacific plays in
the global economy. Despite an improving trend, airport financial margins remained far below pre-pandemic levels and are
economically unsustainable. It is therefore time to remove ineffective restrictions and enable Nations to accelerate
their economic growth. To achieve a truly sustainable recovery from the slump caused by COVID-19, co-operation and the
establishment of standards that harmonise the processes for international travel between states are crucial. The global
recovery will only be realised with the escalation of vaccination campaigns, development of digital health passes, and
supportive policies from governments,” said Mr. Stefano Baronci, Director General of ACI Asia-Pacific.
Opening Borders & Easing Restrictions
Boosted by high rates of vaccination (70% or above in the six largest aviation markets), since early 2022, many
countries have been easing entry requirements, but parts of Emerging and Developed East Asia (Japan, Republic of Korea,
Chinese Taipei, Hong Kong, Macau, China, Mongolia and Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) have kept quarantine
requirements in place. In Asia Pacific and ME, currently 20 countries have no significant entry restrictions.
China plays a key role in the region as most of South East Asian Airports and Australia are largely dependent on Chinese
travellers. The reopening of international air travel to and from China will not only accelerate growth in the region,
but also provides a thrust to the industry across the globe.
Passenger Traffic Performance
While domestic passenger traffic has made considerable progress, with the easing of restrictions within some countries,
international traffic, which is the key revenue driver for airports in terms of passengers’ commercial spend, has
remained largely stagnant due to restrictions and geopolitical tensions in and around the region.
Considering airline seat capacity as a proxy to measure the flow of passengers, as compared to 2019 Q1 data, domestic
traffic has made a recovery of 92% of pre-pandemic levels, but international seat capacity was still down 67% during Q1
as travel restrictions, quarantine and testing requirements continued to hamper the growth of air travel.
The total domestic seat capacity is expected to recover to levels exceeding 2019 by Q2 2022 by approximately +4%. This
is driven largely by Emerging East Asia (notably China), which has 15% more departing seats scheduled in 2022 than in
2019. Middle East domestic capacity remains below 2019 levels. In contrast, total international seat capacity in 2022 is
49% below 2019 levels, with significant variation between sub-regions. South Asia and the Middle East are only down
about 15% on 2019 levels, while Emerging East Asia (China, Mongolia, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) is still
down by 81%, and is once again experiencing stringent travel restrictions.
Robust Cargo Growth
Cargo growth has proven to be resilient in comparison with passenger traffic, and remains significantly above
pre-pandemic levels. As passenger airlines returns providing more belly capacity, air cargo is expected to continue its
growth trajectory.
The sub-regions with the largest cargo shares are Developed Asia (Japan, Republic of Korea, Chinese Taipei, Hong Kong,
Macau) with 32%, followed by Emerging East Asia with 29% and Middle East 16%. Developed East Asia was the only region in
Q4 2021 that recorded traffic levels above 2019 pre-COVID level. All other regions reported levels around 0.85% or above
compared to 2019.
Airport Economic Performance
The EBITDA and Net profit margins, based on a selection of sampled airports handling 30% of total annual regional
traffic volumes in 2030, indicates improving conditions in Q4 2021 (Oct to Dec), driven by an increase in passenger
traffic and optimisation of operating costs. However, the margins remained far below pre-pandemic levels and are
economically unsustainable.
Quarterly revenues remain 58% below the same period last year. Although revenues are improving slowly with traffic
recovery, they remain at low levels, leading to large operating losses for airports. Total operating expenditures have
declined since the start of the pandemic, with the decline having halved in percentage terms in Q4 2021 compared to the
same quarter in the previous year.
Airport Service Quality
Overall satisfaction scores for Airports have increased continuously throughout the pandemic up to Q4 2021, and were
around 5% higher compared to the same period in 2019. Similarly, Middle East performance is also above 2019 levels.