Singapore Airlines sees passenger traffic plummet

As the lockdown and border closures drag into a second full month in Singapore, flag-carrier Singapore Airlines (SIA) group saw its May passenger carriage plunge 99.7% year-over-year (YOY), carrying only 9,600 passengers, or an average of 320 passengers daily, across its network of 17 destinations.

In comparison, SIA group carried 10,800 passengers in April.

Passenger demand (RPK) and capacity (ASK) for parent airline SIA dropped 99.5% and 95.6% YOY respectively. Only flying to 14 key cities, load factors were 9.2%.

Flying to only Chongqing in China once weekly, passenger figures were almost nonexistent, carrying 400 passengers, a 99.9% YOY drop. However, load factors were double digits at 31.7%.

LCC Scoot operated to Perth, Australia, and Hong Kong, a 97.5% decline in ASK. RPK also plunged 99.9% YOY, carrying 600 passengers.

Cargo remains as a growing segment for SIA. Due to the massive grounding of aircraft and network cuts, capacity (AFTK) and demand (RFTK) still fell 61.9% and 52.8% YOY, respectively. However, load factors were up 14.4 points, and there was positive growth across all regions, especially in the East Asia and West Asia/Africa regions, where load factors improved 24.7 pointsand 19.9 points, respectively. West Asia/Africa saw cargo load factors reaching 90.2%, mainly due to the suspension of passenger service to this region.

Numbers for June are expected to improve as SIA added 12 more destination to its network. Regulators also approved passengers to transit from Changi Airport (SIN), currently limited to one-way transit from six Australia and New Zealand airports.

Photo credit: Joe Pries

Chen Chuanren

Chen Chuanren is the Southeast Asia and China Editor for the Aviation Week Network’s (AWN) Air Transport World (ATW) and the Asia-Pacific Defense Correspondent for AWN, joining the team in 2017.