India's domestic air traffic grew 3.4 per cent in November last year, in spite of significant volatility in the market which continues, global airlines body IATA said on Monday.
"Indian domestic traffic rose 3.4 per cent in November compared to a year ago, after an 8.6 per cent rise in October, signaling that conditions remain volatile," the International Air Transport Association said in a latest study.
Noting that growth rates "continued to show significant volatility" as the October growth rate was 8.6 per cent, it said the November performance "is more in line with growth (of 4.2 per cent) so far this year and this is a significant improvement on 2012 performance, when the market contracted 2.1 per cent".
On the international air traffic front, Asia-Pacific airlines recorded an increase in demand of 5.5 per cent compared to November 2012.
"This was supported by the stronger performance of major economies such as China and Japan. With capacity up 6.8 per cent on the previous year, the load factor slipped 0.9 percentage points to 75.4 per cent," the study said, adding that global passenger traffic results for November 2013 showed ‘a moderation in the pace of recent demand growth’.
Total revenue passenger kilometres, which measures actual passenger traffic, rose 4.1 per cent compared to November 2012.
This was slower than the 6.5 per cent year- over-year