Air passenger traffic continued a strong recovery in September

November 8, 2022

Home » Air passenger traffic continued a strong recovery in September
Air passenger traffic continued a strong recovery during September, the International Air Transport Association (IATA) has reported. (IATA is the global representative body for the airline industry.) In year-on-year (y-o-y) terms, total global air passenger traffic in September was up 57%, and had reached 73.8% of the level recorded in September 2019, before the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic. Regarding domestic air passenger traffic only, in September this was up 6.9%, y-o-y, and was at 81% of its level in September 2019. International air traffic jumped 122.2% y-o-y, with all markets reporting strong growth. However, it should be noted that the restoration of domestic air travel operations started significantly earlier than the restart of international flights, and the international air passenger travel recovery still lagged behind the domestic recovery. Thus, international traffic in September was at 69.9% of its September 2019 levels. ....

Other Transport News

C-BRTA urges safe and alert transport of people and goods during Easter holidays

State-owned allowing company the Cross-Border Road Transport Agency (C-BRTA) advises cross-border road transportation operators to stay alert while carrying passengers and products throughout borders throughout the Easter duration. The C-BRTA likewise means to increase the implementation of its law enforcement unit– the Road Transport Inspectorate (RTI)– along significant corridors to border posts to match the anticipated increase in freight and passenger lorry traffic volumes, in addition to impose compliance with road guidelines.

read more

Struggling steel sector, construction challenges delay N2 bridge projects – Sanral

Construction deal with the multibillion-rand Mtentu and Msikaba bridge tasks in the Eastern Cape is dealing with renewed delays, says the South African National Roads Agency Limited (Sanral). The mega-bridges type part of Sanral’s N2 Wild Coast roadway job, which requires the building of a 410 km stretch of road from East London to the Mtamvuna river on the border of the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal provinces.

read more

EV charging station developer objecting to Sanral’s proposed policy changes

The developer of a South African across the country network of solar-powered offgrid electrical car (EV) charging stations, Zero Carbon Charge (CHARGE), has formally challenged the South African National Roads Agency Limited’s (Sanral’s) proposed amendments to its Rest and Services Facilities (RSF) policy. CHARGE asserts that the proposed new policy will put private sector investment at danger, postpone the rollout of critical facilities and develop regulatory uncertainty, and do so at a crucial time in the country’s transition to electrical roadway transportation. CHARGE intends to support the adoption of long-distance EVs, allow EV travel and unlock financial development in backwoods, while likewise minimizing the pressure on the national grid. It already has a fully-operational offgrid charging station at Wolmaransstad, on the N12 highway, in the North West province. Two more, situated on the N3 in between Johannesburg and Durban, are scheduled to start operating in May.

read more

S&P Global Energy forecasts oil prices of $70/bbl to $100/bbl for the remainder of this year

Energy market intelligence company S&& P Global Energy says the 17-million-barrel-a-day decrease in crude oil and improved product supply readily available to the market from March 1 to 11 represents the biggest oil supply disturbance in history, with no other historic episode coming close. Plans for the biggest oil reserves distribution in history, announced on March 11 by the International Energy Agency, might prove to be a bridge from a very unbalanced oil market to one that is less so, however it will be a restricted solution if the Strait of Hormuz stays closed, S&& P Global Energy includes.

read more

N2 bridge projects delayed by struggling local steel sector, construction challenges – Sanral

Construction work on the multibillion-rand Mtentu and Msikaba bridge projects in the Eastern Cape are both dealing with restored hold-ups, says the South African National Roads Agency Limited (Sanral). The mega-bridges type part of Sanral’s N2 Wild Coast road project, which requires the building of a 410 km stretch of road from East London to the Mtamvuna river on the border of the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal provinces.

read more

Agri SA, Agbiz partner with ISA to undertake targeted agri road corridor development

Industry bodies Agri SA and the Agricultural Business Chamber of South Africa (Agbiz) have formalised a strategic collaboration with Infrastructure South Africa (ISA) to prioritise critical agricultural road passages in the Free State. Having signed a memorandum of cooperation, the organisations have made an essential action towards lining up facilities planning with the logistics requirements of the farming economy.

read more