The world’s airports accommodated 4.6 billion passengers in 2021, representing an increase of 28.3 per cent from 2020 or a drop of 49.5 per cent from 2019 results, said the Airports Council International (ACI) World in a new report.
The top 20 airports, representing 19 per cent of global traffic (863 million passengers), experienced a gain of 42.9 per cent from 2020 or a drop of 31.9 per cent vis-à-vis their 2019 results (1.27 billion passengers in 2019), according to the ACI’s annual World Airport Traffic Dataset, which reveals the magnitude of the aviation industry’s recovery and confirming global air traffic rankings for the full year 2021.
“Following the release of preliminary data earlier in the year, we are pleased to share ACI’s complete annual World Airport Traffic Dataset,” said ACI World Director General Luis Felipe de Oliveira. “It remains the authoritative source for global data on air transport demand across major city markets in Africa, Asia-Pacific, Europe, Latin America-Caribbean, the Middle East, and North America. It is also the principal industry reference for air traffic rankings by type and region.
“2021 represents the beginning of the aviation industry’s recovery. While some of the perennial busiest airport leaders have re-joined upper ranks, other regions struggle to recover leading to new entrants in the top 20. With many countries taking steps towards the return of a certain normality, lifting almost all the health measures and travel restrictions as supported by science, we welcome the continuation of air travel demand’s recovery in 2022, despite certain headwinds.”
Busiest airports
Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL, 75.7 million passengers, +76.4 per cent) is back on the top of the 2021 rankings followed by Dallas Forth Worth (DFW, 62.5 million passengers, +58.7per cent) and Denver (DEN, 58.8 million passengers, +74.4 per cent).
From the top 20 rankings, almost all airports have significant domestic traffic representing 65 per cent to 100 per cent of their total passengers. The only exception is Istanbul International Airport (IST) with a larger international traffic share (72 per cent of passenger traffic).
Air cargo volumes increased by 15.4 per cent year-over-year (+4.5 per cent versus 2019), to a record 125 million metric tonnes in 2021. Air cargo volumes in the top 20 airports, representing around 44 per cent (54.8 million metric tonnes) of the global volumes in 2021, gained 14.7 per cent in 2021 year-over-year or 13.4 per cent versus 2019. The gain can be attributed to improved economic conditions that drove an increase in demand for consumer goods and pharmaceutical products (such as personal protective equipment and vaccines).
Hong Kong (+12.5%) regained top rank from Memphis (-2.9%) who inched back to second position, followed by Shanghai (+8.0%) in third. Compared to pre-pandemic levels, the biggest jump in the top 20 rankings was recorded for Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport (ORD), which improved its position by seven spots, from 18th in 2019 to 11th in 2021.
Aircraft movements
2021 global aircraft movements are close to 74 million, representing a gain of 18.7 per cent from 2020 results or -28.2 per cent versus 2019. The top 20 airports, representing 12 per cent of global traffic (8.7 million movements), witnessed a gain of 27.9 per cent from their 2020 results or a drop of 15.7 per cent vis-à-vis their 2019 results (10.3 million in 2019).
ATL is at the top with 708,000 movements (+29.1 per cent from 2020) but still below its 2019 result of 904,000 movements (-21.7 per cent). ORD is still in second rank after leading ATL in 2019 and 2018.