Six airports from the former Yugoslavia have ranked among the 150 busiest on the continent during the first half of the year, out of which one is in the top 100. According to the European airport trade association, Airports Council International Europe (ACI), which publishes the only air traffic report that includes all types of airline passenger flights (full service, low cost, regional, charter, private and others), Belgrade Airport positioned itself as the 89th busiest with 6.162.159 passengers, 62.062 aircraft movements and 17.340 tonnes of cargo processed last year. It was ahead of the likes of London City, Minsk and Vilnius but behind Sofia, Thessaloniki and Gothenburg. Its counterpart in Zagreb ranked 115th with 3.435.531 travellers, 45.061 aircraft movements and 12.684 tonnes of cargo. While it performed better than Tirana, Split and Tallin, which took the following three spots, it was behind Luxembourg, Tbilisi and Wroclaw.
Split Airport continued to improve its standing among European airports, becoming the 117th busiest on the continent during 2019. It was followed by Dubrovnik (129th), Pristina (136th) and Skopje (137th). Ljubljana Airport just missed out of the top 150, ranking 151st on the continent. Out of Europe's capital cities, Sarajevo had the least passenger traffic, coming in at 169th on the continent while London Heathrow, Paris Charles de Gaulle, Amsterdam, Frankfurt, Madrid and Barcelona were the busiest In Europe. Although all six airports from the former Yugoslavia within the top 150 saw their passenger numbers increase over the last year when compared to the previous one, all registered a decline in the amount of processed cargo with exception to Skopje, which was up 3.6%. Overall, freight traffic across Europe posted its worst results since 2012.
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| Overall passenger development across European markets according to ACI |
Europe saw its slowest passenger traffic growth in five years in 2019, mainly due to stronger deceleration in the non-EU market, declining domestic traffic, as well as airline bankruptcies and capacity restraint in the EU market. The Director General of ACI Europe, Olivier Jankovec, said, “Over the past five years, Europe’s airports have increased their passenger traffic by more than +32% - meaning they have actually accommodated an extra 595 million passengers since 2014. But 2019 has been a pivotal year. Volumes were still up, but the deceleration has been notable on the back of both supply and demand pressures”. Looking at the months ahead, Mr Jankovec noted that many airports have planned for continued lower growth in passenger traffic in the face of uncertain trading conditions. He commented, “Some of the supply side pressures might start easing, especially if the 737 MAX is finally approved to fly again and if the recent decrease in oil prices is not reversed. However, there are for now few if any signals that airlines may be considering more capacity expansion - and further airline consolidation remains an ongoing reality”. He added, “The immediate big question mark is what happens with the coronavirus outbreak”.


Comments
All the others are way too small
What the hell!? First worst connectivity in Europe now this. Something really needs to change at BiH airports.
1. London ( LHR + LGW + STN + LTN + LCY + SEN )
2. Paris ( CDG + ORY + BVA )
3. Istanbul ( IST *old and new combined + SAW)
4. Moscow ( SVO + VKO + DME + ZIA )
5. Amsterdam ( AMS )
https://i.imgur.com/r3LjxWK.png
(347.000 in Jan 2019, and JU added slome 36.000 pax in Jan 2020)
Realistically we could expect 15-16% growth which Is somewhere really close to 400.000
I think there was too much capacity added to both Bulgaria and Romania over the past year. We are seeing massive cuts in Romania these days, OTP-TLV on FR being the latest victim. In Bulgaria there seems to be overcapacity as well. For example Wizz Air launched SOF-LGW but they cut one daily flight to Luton.
Objektivno je i ocekivati da u iducih pet godina ovaj aerodrom bude oko sedamdesetog mesta. Umesto sadasnjeg osamdeset devetog. Bazirajuci se na prosirenje terminala, povecanja broja turista i ekonomskog razvoja Srbijev verujem da ce se ostvariti.
🛫😀🛫🇷🇸🛫
SOF:
FR is not expanding due to shortage of planes
W6 is battling in VIE and fighting with the airport for allowing FR at the nicer Terminal 2
FB doing nothing
BOJ+VAR:
Record 2018
FR closed BOJ base due to plane shortage
Bankruptcies of some major airlines/tour operating working on the market
FR won over quite a lot of markets like the British one (except for London) and W6 decided to put rather capacity on other routes or airports.
I do not see growth anytime soon before FR gets new planes and starts expanding again.
Plus the Government should launch a plan of subsidizing direct links to European countries instead of just relying on Arabs coming here because everywhere else in Europe they need a visa.
I understand that beggars can't be choosers but if you don't change your mindset and the image of your country to the rest of Europe you will always be a beggar.
So I don't see BEG catching up to them this year but if JU continues its great expansion next year too I can definitely see them competing for dominance in the region along with SOF.
Just my2cents
BEG-SJJ 07.10-08.05
SJJ-BEG 08.35-09.25
With that schedule JU will also offer connections to London from Sarajevo since in summer on Saturday JU's LHR leaves BEG at 17.05. One weekly connection each way isn't much but it's something. I think JU should consider morning/evening flights to SJJ.
They could have flights like to TGD, ZAG or LJU:
BEG-SJJ 20.20-21.15
SJJ-BEG 21.45-22.40
They could also connect to AMM, CAI, TLV, SVO and the whole Balkans.
LOL
http://www.atl.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/ATL-Traffic-Report-Dec-2019.pdf