Air Travel: East Africa Rising

Geza Ulole

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Air Travel: East Africa Rising
East Africa
by APO Last Updated: Wed, 21 Sep 2016 11:01:43 GMT 0

Kigali International Airport. Picture: Wikipedia

Analysis of International air travel to East Africa this year (January to August) reveals strong growth of 11.2% compared with the same period last year. This is an exceptional performance as growth for Africa as whole has been 5.6%, with countries like Algeria, Egypt, Morocco and Tunisia seeing little growth or even a decline.

The analysis was done by ForwardKeys, a company that predicts future travel patterns by crunching and analysing 14m booking transactions a day.

Olivier Jager, CEO, ForwardKeys, said: “We are seeing a tale of two Africas, with North African countries suffering from political instability and terror activities and Sub Saharan African countries powering ahead, with Ethiopia up 9.6%, Tanzania up 10.6%, Mauritius up 11.6% and Kenya up 14.9%. South Africa is up 11.4%”

Looking ahead to the remainder of the year, the picture is highly encouraging for East Africa. International bookings for travel to East African countries, up to the end of December are 17.3% ahead of where they were at this time last year. Looking at the main origin markets, the UK is 13.2% ahead, Germany is 21% ahead, The USA is 21% ahead, France is 16.1% ahead, the Netherlands is 16.6% ahead, South Africa is 9.4% ahead and India is 34% ahead.

An analysis of airport capacity, defined by the total number of seats, reveals that the stars in terms of growth are Nairobi, Kigali and Kilimanjaro. Looking at international capacity in the periods Q3 2015 - Q2 2016 and Q3 2016 - Q2 2017, Nairobi grew 0% and 2% respectively, Kigali 5% and 4% respectively and Kilimanjaro 11% and 20% respectively. Whilst a 2% growth for Nairobi may not sound so impressive, its capacity is around four times that of Kigali.

Looking at capacity for flights within East Africa in the periods Q3 2015 - Q2 2016 and Q3 2016 - Q2 2017, Nairobi grew 0% and 2% respectively, Kigali 13% and 5% respectively and Kilimanjaro 6% and 14% respectively.

The data has been released ahead of AviaDev, a new airline route development conference and AHIF, Africa’s highest profile hotel investment conference, which run concurrently at the Radisson Blu Hotel & Convention Centre in Kigali from 4-6 October 2016.

Jonathan Worsley, Chairman of Bench Events, which is organising AHIF and AviaDev, said: “We are seeing unprecedented interest in the AHIF AviaDev combination, with over twenty airlines signing up to talk about new air routes, with global CEOs of the world’s biggest hotel companies present to discuss their plans for Africa and with government ministers keen to attract inward investment; one has to ask: “Why is there such serious interest?” These highly encouraging booking figures explain it.”

Jonathan concluded: “If what is happening in Rwanda becomes a yardstick against which other East African countries measure themselves, I would expect this strong growth to continue. There, a new airport is under construction 25km outside Kigali, with the ability to cater for 4.5 million passengers/ year, seven times today’s traffic. The national airline has invested in new aircraft and set itself ambitious growth plans and the government is actively promoting Rwanda as a destination for conferences and exhibitions.”

Full details on AHIF and AviaDev, including the programme and speaker line-up can be found at www.Africa-Conference.com

Air Travel: East Africa Rising
 

Whilst a 2% growth for Nairobi may not sound so impressive, its capacity is around four times that of Kigali.
 
mbona umesahau hio ya overal hspo juu ambapo kenya inaongoza Africa kwa % increase

Olivier Jager, CEO, ForwardKeys, said: “We are seeing a tale of two Africas, with North African countries suffering from political instability and terror activities and Sub Saharan African countries powering ahead, with Ethiopia up 9.6%, Tanzania up 10.6%, Mauritius up 11.6% and Kenya up 14.9%. South Africa is up 11.4%”
 

selective amnesia
 
Kumbuka from smaller base number of tourists in Kenya is less than 1 mln tourists!
 
Kumbuka from smaller base number of tourists in Kenya is less than 1 mln tourists!
I dont know what you mean by from smaller base, but its not just tourists who travel.... also remember that int'l conferences and expos are also becoming a big thing nowadays,international business is also not b bad........
JKI alone is clossing up to reach a traffinc of 7million pa. if tourists are 1million as you put it, then lets say bussiness people are another 1million, the rest of 5million are hardworking kenyans...



Mombasa's moin international airport traffic numbers is est 1.7 million last year 2015, while kilimanjaro is max est 800,000.... thats twice less than mombasa ...



tena ukumbuke kenya's airspace is categorised unsafe, we suffer from terrorism just like the north africans.... but we still in the mix, imagin how it would be if kenya had no security problems resulting from terrorism...hapo ndo hamngetugusa ata kidogo
 
Geza,
Naona watu kimyaaaaaa!, wamebanwa na ripoti nzuri sana kwa Tanzania kuhusu sekta ya usafiri wa anga (abiria) ya Afrika, ripoti itakayotumiwa katika mkutano mkubwa mjini Kigali, Rwanda hapo Oktoba mwaka 2016.
 
just in


“Now it is for real,” Macharia said in an interview with the Star on Thursday.
Two weeks ago, officials from the US Federal Aviation Administration inspected the facilities at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport and confirmed to the Kenya Civil Aviation Authority that all was well, he said.
The International Civil Aviation Authority will conduct an audit of the facilities to give the final greenlight.
The KCAA has projected a mid-October date for the final audit, director general Gilbert Kibe confirmed earlier this week.
“The US has even requested us to ask airlines interested in flying directly from Kenya to apply for the necessary permissions,” the CS said.
The issue of directs flights between the two countries has been on and off for close to five years.
Kenya scored 88 per cent in a security audit by the ICAO conducted between September 17 and 24, 2015, above the minimum 80 per cent required mark.
This was after failing in previous audits where ICAO gave JKIA 78.42 per cent February last year, up from 66 per cent in 2013
Kenya-US direct flights might begin in November, says CS

 
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