Amsterdam leads Europe airport charge

epa02344446 (FILE) A file photograph dated 14 February 2008 showing the logo at Schiphol Airport, Amsterdam, Netherlands. Media reports state that Dutch police have arrested an alleged British terror suspect at Amsterdam's Schiphol airport on 19 September 2010. The British citizen, who is of Somali decent, was en-route from Liverpool John Lennon Airport in England to Entebbe International Airport in Uganda. 'The man was arrested by the Dutch Royal Military Police on board a plane before it was due to leave,' prosecutors said.  EPA/EVERT ElZINGA

BLoomberg

Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport added 4.8 million passengers in 2017 with the help of a six-runway setup that’s unique in Europe, putting it almost level with Paris Charles de Gaulle as the region’s second-busiest hub.
Schiphol, home base to KLM, attracted 68.4 million travellers, consolidating its lead over Frankfurt and putting it within 1 million of the total at Charles de Gaulle, which is the headquarters of the Dutch carrier’s parent Air France.
London Heathrow remained Europe’s leading airport despite the constraints of only two runways as airlines turned to bigger planes to boost capacity. The UK hub isn’t due to get a third strip until 2025 at least.
Amsterdam lifted passenger numbers 7.7 percent in the 12 months, the most among Europe’s top bases, following 9.1 percent growth in 2016. That’s contributed 10.2 million more travellers in just two years, the equivalent of adding an entire airport such as Glasgow’s main hub.
Schiphol led a surge in passenger numbers across European airports. Charles de Gaulle itself posted a 5.6 percent gain after a flat 2016 as tourist visits to France rebounded from a string of terror attacks, while Frankfurt’s 6.1 percent growth rate, the fastest in six years, was helped by labour peace at Deutsche Lufthansa AG and incentives that brought Ryanair Holdings Plc to the airport.
While Schiphol plans to open a third terminal in 2023, when Frankfurt will also add a new building, its advance could be stymied by a cap on flights at 500,000 a year aimed at curbing noise and pollution. The Dutch hub had 496,000 plane movements from its multiple runways in 2017, 22,000 more than at Heathrow.
Istanbul’s Ataturk hub rebounded from a passenger decline that followed a foiled coup in Turkey in 2016, though it will close once the city’s new airport, slated to open in October, is able to handle sufficient traffic. The replacement hub will start with two runways but has plans for six.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend