Oil Rout: Air Transport Trade In Nigeria, Others Decline By $200m

Given the global macro challenges, it is estimated that air transport business in major African cities, including Nigeria declined by $1 per passenger since the slide in oil prices two years ago. This translates to over $200 million considering that Africa’s air traffic for 2015 was put at over 200 million.
The aviation sector is said to cater for 3.5 billion passengers globally and is said to be a major facilitator for as much as 25 per cent of world trade annually, the International Air Transport Association (IATA), the clearing house for 260 airlines is quoted to have said.
Despite the sliding oil prices, IATA could see huge potential for air transportation in Nigeria, considering the country’s estimated population size of 170 million.
The group held that getting the huge population into flying required a sound business policy that would bring about low cost airlines. Not a few are impressed with some of the nation’s aerodromes despite several billions of naira that went into the airport remodelling exercise.
But even with that, latest reports from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) show that air transport grew by 3.7 per cent year-on-year in 2015 and contributed 0.1 per cent to total Gross Domestic Product (GDP), the equivalence of N63billion or ($317milllion).
The report showed an increase of aircraft movement in/out of Nigerian airports in 2015 put at 61,692 approximately 6.9 per cent. However, the NBS noted that in the third and fourth quarters of 2015, there were 11.3 per cent and 14.3 per cent fewer domestic flights than in the same quarter of 2014 respectively, which resulted in a total of 46,157 and 50,686 flights in the third and fourth quarters.

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NNPC
It also added that the year-on-year declines in the number of international flights recorded 3.3 per cent and 10.5 per cent in the third and fourth quarters of 2015 respectively, which resulted in a total of 11,547 international flights in third quarter of 2015 and 11,006 in the fourth. The Bureau also explained that there was a large quarterly increase in domestic flights in the fourth quarter of 2015 of 9.8 per cent.
International flights saw a decline of 541 flights, or 4.7 per cent, reversing the increase of 344 flights (3.1 per cent) recorded in the third quarter.
This revelation indicates that the difference between the number of domestic and international aircraft to pass through Nigeria airports tended to be smaller than the difference between the number of domestic and international passengers, reflecting the fact that international aircraft tended to be larger, and therefore carried more passengers.
The NBS also recorded a total of 89.5 per cent of cargo movements across the country in the last quarter of 2015, stating that whereas the third quarter of 2015 saw a year-on- year decline of 13.9 per cent, the fourth quarter saw a year-on-year increase of 12.8 for the airport.
The bureau said that the third quarter of 2015 saw a quarterly increase in the weight of cargo to pass through Nigerian airports of 724,792Kg or 1.8 per cent, to reach 41,636,713kg.
The bulk of the weight of cargo to move through Nigerian Airports it declared went through MMA in Lagos in the second half of 2015.
The data added, “This airport accounted for 91 per cent and 88.2 per cent of the weight in the third and fourth quarters; the decline in the share between these two periods is in spite of an increase in the weight of cargo to move through MMA of 14.8 per cent.
“The decline was mainly the result of a large increase in the weight of cargo to pass through Kano Airport between these periods. Whereas in the third quarter of 2015, the weight of cargo to pass through Kano was 1,681,772kg, this rose by 2,474,862kg (147.2 per cent) to 4,156,634kg in the fourth quarter.
“As a result, Kano significantly increased its share of cargo between the fourth quarters of 2014 and 2015, from 3.3 per cent to 7.7 per cent. Port Harcourt also saw an increase over this period, from 2 per cent to 2.7 per cent, despite a year-on-year decrease in the weight of cargo moved of 4.6 per cent, this decrease was considerably less than for Abuja (16.3 per cent) or Calabar (44.4 per cent).”

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Wole Shadare