NEARLY seven million passengers
passed through Cyprus’ two
airports in 2005, an increase of
5.6 per cent.
Thirty-nine thousand tonnes of
freight also passed through
Larnaca and Paphos, a growth of
5.5 per cent on 2004.
Larnaca did not even make it
onto the list of Europe’s top-20
busiest airports. Dusseldorf, in
20th place, has passenger air
ransport numbers approaching
15.5 million.
According to Eurostat, the
Statistical Office of the
European Communities, the total
number of passengers transported
by air in the EU25 rose by 8.5
per cent, to more than 700
million in 2005.
Passenger numbers rose by 8.8
per cent in 2004 and by 4.9 per
cent in 2003. Of these
passengers, 23 per cent were
carried on national flights, 42
per cent on intra-EU25 flights
and 35 per cent on extra-EU25
flights.
London Heathrow remained the
EU’s busiest airport in terms of
passengers, handling 68 million
in 2005 – nearly 10 per cent of
all air passengers in the EU25 –
and up one per cent compared to
2004.
Paris Charles de Gaulle (53
million passengers, plus five
per cent) and Frankfurt am Main
(52 million, plus two) were the
second and third busiest
airports, followed by Amsterdam
Schipol (44 million) and Madrid
Barajas (42 million).
Passenger numbers rose in almost
all Member States in 2005
compared to 2004. Five Member
States recorded growth of 25 per
cent or more, the highest being
Latvia (plus 77 per cent),
followed by Slovakia (plus 46
per cent), Lithuania (plus 44
per cent), Estonia (plus 41 per
cent) and Hungary (plus 25 per
cent).
The highest numbers of
passengers were registered in
he United Kingdom (204
million), Germany (146 million),
Spain (144 million,), France
(108 million) and Italy (88
million).
Air freight in the EU25 rose by
3.5 per cent compared to 2004,
o almost 11 million tonnes, 80
per cent of which was with
non-EU25 countries. The main
partners were North America,
representing 30 per cent of
freight traffic with non-EU25
countries, the Far East (28 per
cent) and the Middle East (14
per cent).
German and British airports
handled around half of all
EU25’s air freight.
Frankfurt am Main (two million
onnes) was in 2005 the EU’s
leading airport for air freight,
followed by Amsterdam Schipol
(1.5 million), London Heathrow
(1.4 million) and Paris Charles
de Gaulle (1.2 million).
Together, they handled 55 per
cent of all EU25 air freight.