Cathay Pacific Airways' passengers increase 7.7% to 2.9m
Cargo and mail uplift also increased.
Cathay Pacific Airways has released combined Cathay Pacific and Dragonair traffic figures for April 2015 that show an increase in both the number of passengers carried and the cargo and mail uplift compared to the same month last year.
According to a release from Cathay Pacific, the carrier and Dragonair carried a total of 2,912,562 passengers in April – an increase of 7.7% compared to the same month last year.
The passenger load factor grew by 2.5 percentage points to 87.2% while capacity, measured in available seat kilometres (ASKs), increased by 4.3%. In the first four months of the year, passenger traffic grew by 8.4% while capacity was up by 6.2%
The two airlines carried 144,579 tonnes of cargo and mail last month, an increase of 5.2% compared to April 2014. The cargo and mail load factor fell by 0.5 percentage points to 62.6%.
Capacity, measured in available cargo/mail tonne kilometres, rose by 7.3% while cargo and mail revenue tonne kilometres (RTKs) flown increased by 6.3%. In the first four months of the year, tonnage rose by 10.5% against a capacity increase of 9.1% and a 13.0% rise in RTKs.
Here's more from Cathay Pacific:
Cathay Pacific General Manager Revenue Management Patricia Hwang said: “After a strong March, passenger demand remained robust throughout April and the growth in traffic once again outpaced the growth in capacity.
Demand was boosted by the Easter and Ching Ming holiday at the beginning of the month, particularly out of our home market.
Japan, Korea and Thailand were the most popular destinations for Easter getaways from Hong Kong though we also saw high load factors to other Asian destinations and Australia/New Zealand.
Demand in the premium cabins was slightly behind expectations, particularly on long-haul routes.”
Cathay Pacific General Manager Cargo Sales & Marketing Mark Sutch said: “Our cargo business benefitted from a modest rush in demand out of the home market before Easter and the pick-up after the holiday was reasonably swift.
Demand out of the key manufacturing centres in Mainland China fluctuated throughout the month and we faced intense competition out of Western China cities.
Transpacific business held up well and we continued to benefit from the logjam of freight in seaports on the West Coast of the United States, even after the industrial dispute was resolved.
We saw robust demand out of Southeast Asia, and Vietnam in particular, in April while strong traffic to India remains a key focus.”