F9 Driver
Wear The Fox Hat
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- Dec 15, 2001
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From last week's RMN. Sounds rather Enron-esque IMHO.
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/business/article/0,1299,DRMN_4_3202920,00.html
July DIA record
Inexpensive ticket prices produce boost in passenger traffic
By David Kesmodel, Rocky Mountain News
September 23, 2004 Passenger traffic at Denver International Airport surged to a record in July as rock-bottom ticket prices spurred more people to fly.
DIA, the fifth-busiest U.S. airport, said traffic rose 13 percent to 4.23 million passengers from 3.75 million a year earlier.
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/images/spacers/spacer.gif[font=arial, helvetica, sans-serif]Advertisement[/font]GetAd('31', false, 'c1', 250, 250, 'BUSINESS_ARTICLE_DETAIL', ''); http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/images/spacers/spacer.gifhttp://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/images/spacers/spacer.gifThe airport also revised downward its traffic data for the first six months of the year by 1.03 million, saying United Airlines, the airport's dominant carrier, misstated some numbers in reports to DIA officials.
The revisions left DIA's traffic through the first seven months of this year at 24.95 million, up 16 percent from the same period last year. The airport, opened in 1995, remains on track to post the busiest year in Denver aviation history.
"The fares that were out there in almost every market were so incredible for the consumer that it really stimulated traffic," said Joe Hodas, a spokesman for Frontier Airlines. "It looks like some passengers said, 'We can't not take that trip now. It makes too much sense.' "
Last month, DIA reported its June traffic was 4.26 million, a record. The figure would have topped the July mark, but it turned out the number should have been 3.99 million, which ranks No. 2 in Denver history.
DIA's misstated data was due largely to United misreporting traffic for Ted, its discount carrier that took wing in February. DIA revised traffic figures for each month of this year, including a slight upward revision for March.
Chicago-based United said it had reported traffic for Ted and United separately, but it had failed to subtract the Ted data from the United figure.
Airline spokesman Jeff Green said the company caught the error, brought it to DIA's attention and has taken steps to ensure such mistakes don't happen again.
Denver-based Frontier, Delta Air Lines, AirTran Airways and Alaska Airlines were among carriers reporting traffic increases of 15 percent or greater in July.
Frontier's traffic grew 25 percent. In addition to low fares, the increase is due to a 40 percent boost in seat capacity by the carrier across its system, Hodas said.
Systemwide, Frontier, whose average one-way fare has been about $100, carried 32 percent more passengers than it did a year earlier, he said.
One reason July traffic at DIA was so strong may have been that some people chose to fly for certain short- haul trips rather than drive because of high gas prices, he said.
Denver's surge reflects increased demand for air travel across the country, and fares here "are very competitive," United's Green said.
The improving U.S. economy is a factor, too. DIA gets 46 percent of its traffic from people connecting in Denver to other cities.
The low fares, as well as high jet-fuel prices, are battering the airline industry. United is struggling to emerge from bankruptcy. Frontier, while much healthier, is projecting its third straight quarterly loss for the period ending Sept. 30.
A second major U.S. carrier, US Airways, entered bankruptcy this month, its second filing in 25 months.
And the industry is concerned that the seasonal decline in travel that traditionally comes in autumn appears to be worse this year than many carriers expected, Hodas said.
For DIA, traffic should still be sufficient to bring the airport its busiest year, breaking a mark set in 2000. Turner West, the airport's co- manager, spoke proudly of DIA's numbers Wednesday. The double- digit year-over-year increase in traffic "continues to reflect the strength of the Denver market, and it underlines the important role that aviation plays in the local and regional economy," he said in a statement.
United, Ted and United's regional-jet affiliates flew 57.9 percent of DIA's paying domestic passengers in July. Frontier and its Frontier JetExpress regional-jet arm, operated by Seattle's Horizon Air, flew 17.5 percent.
In stark contrast to DIA's passenger demand, the airport's air-cargo activity stayed soft in July.
Cargo handled at the airport totaled 56.9 million pounds, down 10 percent from a year earlier. For the first seven months of this year, cargo totaled 399.3 million pounds, down 1.5 percent.
Airport traffic
24.95 million: Passenger traffic at Denver International Airport through the first seven months of this year, up 16 percent from the same period last year
4.23 million: Traffic at DIA in July, a 13 percent increase over last year
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/business/article/0,1299,DRMN_4_3202920,00.html
July DIA record
Inexpensive ticket prices produce boost in passenger traffic
By David Kesmodel, Rocky Mountain News
September 23, 2004 Passenger traffic at Denver International Airport surged to a record in July as rock-bottom ticket prices spurred more people to fly.
DIA, the fifth-busiest U.S. airport, said traffic rose 13 percent to 4.23 million passengers from 3.75 million a year earlier.
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/images/spacers/spacer.gif[font=arial, helvetica, sans-serif]Advertisement[/font]GetAd('31', false, 'c1', 250, 250, 'BUSINESS_ARTICLE_DETAIL', ''); http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/images/spacers/spacer.gifhttp://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/images/spacers/spacer.gifThe airport also revised downward its traffic data for the first six months of the year by 1.03 million, saying United Airlines, the airport's dominant carrier, misstated some numbers in reports to DIA officials.
The revisions left DIA's traffic through the first seven months of this year at 24.95 million, up 16 percent from the same period last year. The airport, opened in 1995, remains on track to post the busiest year in Denver aviation history.
"The fares that were out there in almost every market were so incredible for the consumer that it really stimulated traffic," said Joe Hodas, a spokesman for Frontier Airlines. "It looks like some passengers said, 'We can't not take that trip now. It makes too much sense.' "
Last month, DIA reported its June traffic was 4.26 million, a record. The figure would have topped the July mark, but it turned out the number should have been 3.99 million, which ranks No. 2 in Denver history.
DIA's misstated data was due largely to United misreporting traffic for Ted, its discount carrier that took wing in February. DIA revised traffic figures for each month of this year, including a slight upward revision for March.
Chicago-based United said it had reported traffic for Ted and United separately, but it had failed to subtract the Ted data from the United figure.
Airline spokesman Jeff Green said the company caught the error, brought it to DIA's attention and has taken steps to ensure such mistakes don't happen again.
Denver-based Frontier, Delta Air Lines, AirTran Airways and Alaska Airlines were among carriers reporting traffic increases of 15 percent or greater in July.
Frontier's traffic grew 25 percent. In addition to low fares, the increase is due to a 40 percent boost in seat capacity by the carrier across its system, Hodas said.
Systemwide, Frontier, whose average one-way fare has been about $100, carried 32 percent more passengers than it did a year earlier, he said.
One reason July traffic at DIA was so strong may have been that some people chose to fly for certain short- haul trips rather than drive because of high gas prices, he said.
Denver's surge reflects increased demand for air travel across the country, and fares here "are very competitive," United's Green said.
The improving U.S. economy is a factor, too. DIA gets 46 percent of its traffic from people connecting in Denver to other cities.
The low fares, as well as high jet-fuel prices, are battering the airline industry. United is struggling to emerge from bankruptcy. Frontier, while much healthier, is projecting its third straight quarterly loss for the period ending Sept. 30.
A second major U.S. carrier, US Airways, entered bankruptcy this month, its second filing in 25 months.
And the industry is concerned that the seasonal decline in travel that traditionally comes in autumn appears to be worse this year than many carriers expected, Hodas said.
For DIA, traffic should still be sufficient to bring the airport its busiest year, breaking a mark set in 2000. Turner West, the airport's co- manager, spoke proudly of DIA's numbers Wednesday. The double- digit year-over-year increase in traffic "continues to reflect the strength of the Denver market, and it underlines the important role that aviation plays in the local and regional economy," he said in a statement.
United, Ted and United's regional-jet affiliates flew 57.9 percent of DIA's paying domestic passengers in July. Frontier and its Frontier JetExpress regional-jet arm, operated by Seattle's Horizon Air, flew 17.5 percent.
In stark contrast to DIA's passenger demand, the airport's air-cargo activity stayed soft in July.
Cargo handled at the airport totaled 56.9 million pounds, down 10 percent from a year earlier. For the first seven months of this year, cargo totaled 399.3 million pounds, down 1.5 percent.
Airport traffic
24.95 million: Passenger traffic at Denver International Airport through the first seven months of this year, up 16 percent from the same period last year
4.23 million: Traffic at DIA in July, a 13 percent increase over last year