atlanta” target=”_blank”>Atlanta< pandemic, the honor has gone to an airport in China, according to a new report.
Earlier this week, Airports Council International (ACI) released its world airport traffica> rankings for 2020. <
“The impact of the COVID-19 on global passenger traffic pandemic brought aviation to a virtual standstill in 2020, and we continue to face an existential threat,” Luis Felipe de Oliveira, ACI’s world director general, said in a statement. “The data published today reveals the challenge airports continue to face and it remains imperative that the industry is supported through direct support and sensible policy decisions from governments to ensure that aviation can endure, rebuild connectivity, and fuel a global economic recovery.”
The Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport was ousted as the busiest airport in the world for passenger traffic last year, because of the coronavirus pandemic.
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Overall, airports around the world saw huge declines in passengera> traffic last year. According to ACI, airports around the world had 64.6% fewer passengers last year.<
The Atlanta airport saw a 61.2% decrease from 2019 — when there were more than 110 million passengers — to 2020 — when only 42.9 million passengers were reported.
Meanwhile, the Guangzhou airport saw only a 40.4% drop. In 2019, the airport had 73.3 million passengers and in 2020, it had 43.7 million passengers.
Before last year, the Atlanta airport had been the world’s busiest airport since 1998, according to reports.
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Seven of the top 10 airports in terms of passenger traffic are now in China, while only three are in the U.S.
The Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport in China became 2020’s busiest airport, moving up from 11th place in 2019.
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“The findings show that the impact remains uneven with different regions experiencing different challenges and requiring different policy decisions and support from governments to lay the foundation for recovery,” de Oliveira said.
Though passenger traffic was hit significantly by the pandemic, air cargo was less impacted, the ACI report found.
Cargo volumes decreased by only 8.9% overall — and in the top 10 airports, it actually grew by 3%. According to the report, “the gain can be attributed to the increase in demand for online consumer goods and pharmaceutical products and personal protective equipment.”
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