Advancing UK Aerospace, Defence, Security & Space Solutions Worldwide
  • Home
  • /
  • Aerospace
  • /
  • MAG sees passenger numbers rise to over 50% of pre-pandemic traffic in October

Aerospace

MAG sees passenger numbers rise to over 50% of pre-pandemic traffic in October

Manchester Airports Group (MAG) airports reported today that it served 2.7 million passengers in October, which represented 51% of pre-pandemic traffic compared to the same month in October 2019.

Image courtesy MAG

These figures mark six months of sustained increases in the number of passengers travelling through MAG airports. In May 2021, the Group only welcomed 260,000 passengers. By contrast, October 2021 is the first month since February 2020 in which both Manchester and London Stansted airports have each served more than one million passengers.

Advertisement
Advanced Engineering RT

The increase seen in October was boosted by the half term period and pent-up demand for international travel after more than a year of Covid-related disruption. MAG’s airports served one million passengers during half term alone, making it the busiest period since the pandemic began.

The number of passengers served in October was 22% higher than in September following a further easing of restrictions on international travel on 4th October, which saw PCR tests on replaced by cheaper lateral flow requirements, alongside the removal of all remaining countries from the ‘red list’.

This positive trend is expected to continue in the lead up to the festive season.  Leisure travel between the UK and the US resumed on 8th November in a significant moment for the revival of the aviation industry. Manchester Airport’s Virgin Atlantic services to New York and Orlando restarted on the first day after the relaxation, with the Singapore Airlines service to Houston set to return in early December. Aer Lingus is also launching new services to New York, Orlando and Boston later this month, having established a new base at Manchester which is already operating flights to Barbados.

As the North’s Global Gateway, Manchester Airport served 1.6 million passengers travelling direct to the US each year before the pandemic and is currently expecting to welcome back approximately half of its pre-pandemic routes to America in the first month of the transatlantic restart. The airport is also working with airlines to resume the remaining services as soon as possible.

London Stansted’s broad range of direct connections across Europe has made its recovery the strongest amongst major UK airports. Traffic returned to 43% of pre-pandemic levels in September, compared to 38% at London Heathrow, and 24% at London Gatwick, according to CAA data.

East Midlands airport has also had its busiest period since passenger operations resumed and this month served over 200,000 passengers.

East Midlands also recently confirmed that Ryanair would be operating 31 routes from the airport in summer 2022, which will see over 130 flights a week to popular European holiday destinations.

To ensure the recovery continues, the UK’s largest airport group is calling on the Government to set out a clear commitment and roadmap for removing all remaining restrictions on international travel in 2022. Clarity on the Government’s ambition to return to restriction-free travel as soon as possible would allow consumers and the aviation sector to look ahead to the summer season with confidence, following almost two years of shut down and uncertainty.

Advertisement
Advanced Engineering RT

Cargo volumes at East Midlands airport were 8.9% higher in October compared to the same month last year, as the UK’s largest pure freight airport heads towards its busiest time over the festive period. Volumes at Manchester Airport are also up 23.6%, while London Stansted saw volumes decreased by 24.6%.

Charlie Cornish, MAG CEO said: “These figures demonstrate clearly how the demand for international travel is ready and waiting for when restrictions are eased.

“It is hugely positive to have seen our traffic levels recover month on month, and the removal of costly barriers and uncertainty is giving consumers renewed confidence to get back to travel.

“We need to see this positive trend continue following the reopening of transatlantic services to the US in early November and as we continue to rebuild Manchester Airport’s network of direct long-haul connections.

“To ensure we continue on this path to a full recovery, we are calling on the Government to set out a clear ambition and plan for removing remaining restrictions on travelling abroad at the earliest opportunity.”
 

 

Advertisement
L3Harris L3Harris
IAG Cargo transitions 160-truck fleet at Heathrow to HVO

Aerospace

IAG Cargo transitions 160-truck fleet at Heathrow to HVO

25 April 2024

IAG Cargo has completed a transition from diesel to hydrotreated vegetable oil (HVO) for its 160-strong ground vehicle fleet at London Heathrow Airport.

Birmingham Airport achieves global carbon accreditation

Aerospace

Birmingham Airport achieves global carbon accreditation

25 April 2024

Birmingham Airport (BHX) has achieved Level 3 (optimisation) of the Airport Carbon Accreditation (ACA) scheme for a second year.

British aviation set for more SAF

Aerospace

British aviation set for more SAF

25 April 2024

The UK Government has today confirmed new targets to ensure 10% of all jet fuel in flights taking off from the UK comes from sustainable sources by 2030 through its sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) mandate.

Loganair completes review of operations

Aerospace

Loganair completes review of operations

25 April 2024

Loganair has announced that it has completed an initial root and branch review of its operation under new CEO Luke Farajallah and has confirmed it is taking decisive action to stabilise and bring resilience to its core flying network.

Advertisement
ODU RT
Viasat collaborates with uAvionix on seamless UAV comms

Aerospace

Viasat collaborates with uAvionix on seamless UAV comms

24 April 2024

Viasat has announced a collaboration with uAvionix, a provider of certified avionics for crewed and uncrewed aviation, with uAvionix joining Viasat’s Velaris Partner Network.

Lucideon expands with new offices in Japan

Aerospace

Lucideon expands with new offices in Japan

24 April 2024

Materials science and technology consultancy Lucideon is targeting international growth with expansion in the Japanese market.

Advertisement
Marshall RT