Ethiopia has overtaken Dubai as a conduit for long-haul
passengers to Africa, highlighting the success of the state airline’s
expansion drive and the reforms of its new prime minister.
Travel
consultancy ForwardKeys said on Wednesday Addis Ababa airport had
increased the number of international transfer passengers to sub-Saharan
Africa for five years in a row, and in 2018 had surpassed Dubai, one of
the world’s busiest airports, as the transfer hub for long-haul travel
to the region.
Analysing data from travel booking
systems that record 17 million flight bookings a day, ForwardKeys found
the number of long-haul transfers to sub-Saharan Africa via Addis Ababa
jumped by 85 percent from 2013 to 2017.
Transfers via Dubai over the same period rose by 31 percent.
So far this year, Addis Ababa’s growth is 18 percent, versus 3 percent for Dubai.
Dubai has long been a major global air travel hub because it is the base of Gulf carrier Emirates.
Given the lack of an “open skies” deal smoothing flights across
Africa, many passengers travelling between one part of the continent and
another, or from Asia or Europe to Africa, must often transit through
Dubai.
But this is changing.
15-year strategy
Ethiopian
Airlines, the country’s most successful state company, is accelerating a
15-year strategy it launched in 2010 to win back market share on routes
to and from Africa that are dominated by Turkish Airlines and Emirates.
It is also weaving a patchwork of new African routes to rapidly expanding and lucrative Asian markets.
ForwardKeys
also attributed the recent jump in bookings via Addis Ababa in part to a
positive international response to the broad reforms introduced by
Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, who came to power in April and has
upended politics in the Horn of Africa country of around 105 million
people.
It cited two changes in particular: a move to
allow visitors to apply for visas online, and Abiy’s pledge to open
Ethiopia’s largely state-controlled economy to foreign investment.
After
Abiy made peace with Eritrea to end a two-decade state of war,
Ethiopian resumed flights to its neighbour in July. This month, it
relaunched flights to Somalia’s capital after four decades.
And
the rise of travel via Addis Ababa looks set to continue. International
bookings via Ethiopia are up 40 percent year-on-year for November to
January 2019, ahead of all other destinations in Africa, ForwardKeys
said.
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