312,556 passengers passed through Brussels Airport in October, barely 13% of the number of passengers in October 2019. Freight transport continues to grow, with volumes transported increasing by 12% in October.
‘The passenger figures for the last few months are obviously catastrophic,’ explains Arnaud Feist, CEO of Brussels Airport Company. “The current situation is untenable for all players in the aviation sector. Rapid COVID tests are essential to enable the aviation sector to gradually emerge from the current crisis while safeguarding public health and safety. We are working hard on this. A Europe-wide harmonisation of the testing strategy is essential. The survival of our sector is at stake. »
Last month, Brussels Airport welcomed fewer passengers than in previous months due to an increase in the number of destinations to which the government strongly advises against travel, which has also forced airlines to reduce their number of flights or to cancel certain destinations.
The number of transfer passengers was around 17%. Brussels Airlines’ African network plays an important role in this respect.
In October, 45 of the more than 60 passenger airlines were active at Brussels Airport, serving more than 110 destinations and operating more than 1,000 flights per week.
For the fifth consecutive month, air freight saw an increase in volumes transported, i.e. + 17% compared to October 2019. Thanks to this result, Brussels Airport continues to outperform global and European air freight growth. The main cause of global negative growth is still the halt in wide-body passenger flights, which severely limits capacity, freight on board passenger aircraft carrying a significant part of the freight transported worldwide.
Volumes in the full cargo segment more than doubled compared with the same period in 2019 (+114%). The express services also maintained strong growth compared to last year (+19%). This largely compensates for the limited volumes on passenger flights.
The total number of flight movements in October 2020 decreased by 66.5% compared to October 2019, to 6,900 (compared to 20,622 last year). The number of passenger flights decreased by 78%, while the number of cargo flights increased by 31%. There was an average of 80 passengers per flight.