Air Travel Flight Activity at Athens Airport Picks Up Pace by GTP editing team 16 July 2021 written by GTP editing team 16 July 2021 0 comments Share 0FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail 6 Photo source: HRADF Athens International Airport (AIA) has recovered 77 percent of total 2019 traffic so far and is up by 74 percent or 273 flights against last year, according to the latest briefing released by the European Organization for the Safety of Air Navigation (Eurocontrol). According to the Eurocontrol report, which examines the impact of Covid-19 on its member airports, AIA still has to boost traffic by 23 percent if it wants to achieve 2019 levels. The report also found that AIA lost a total 165,580 flights since March 1, 2020. The country’s largest airport is currently handling an average of 641 daily flights, down by 23 percent or 188 flights against 2019. Sky express aircraft at Athens International Airport. National carrier AEGEAN is the busiest airline carrying out 253 average daily flights, which is also down by 29 percent compared to 2019 pre-pandemic levels. Next in terms of flight activity is Greek airline Sky express with 105 departures in Greece and abroad marking a 9 percent increase against 2019, followed by low-cost carrier Ryanair with 32 departures down by 23 percent against 2019; Air France with 18 flights, up by 2 percent; and Lufthansa with 12 departures, down by 14 percent over 2019. The briefing also found that Greece is the “busiest destination country” with 151 average daily flights down by 16 percent over 2019. Leading international destinations in terms of departures out of Athens Airport besides Greece are France accounting for 19 departures (-10 percent), Germany with 18 (-11 percent), Italy with 14 daily departures, down by 46 percent, and Cyprus with 13 stronger by 11 percent. Source: Eurocontrol Mykonos and Santorini remain the two most-visited destinations in Greece in terms of departures from AIA. In fact, Santorini is the busiest destination airport with 17 average daily flights but down against 2019 by 34 percent. In the July 2-8 period, the top five Greek destinations in terms of departures were Santorini, Mykonos, Thessaloniki, Larnaca (Cyprus) and Heraklion, Crete. According to Eurocontrol, of the 641 flights that ran during the July 2-8 period, 302 were domestic flights – down by 17 percent against 2019 – and 338 international – weaker by 27 percent over 2019. Source: Eurocontrol The recent data confirms Eurocontrol’s previous forecast of a speedy recovery initially driven by domestic travel demand. The organization estimated that it will most likely take Greece approximately four years to achieve 92 percent of 2019 air traffic levels. Join the 15,000+ travel executives who read our newsletter Follow GTP Headlines on Google News to keep up to date with all the latest on tourism and travel in Greece. Share 0 FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail GTP editing team This is the team byline for GTP. The copyrights for these articles are owned by GTP. They may not be redistributed without the permission of the owner. previous post Covid-19: IATA Calls on States to Follow WHO Guidance on Cross-border Travel next post Athens Municipality and GNTO Team Up to Promote Greek Capital as Leading Destination You may also like Greece’s Hotel Market Sees Major Investments Over Four Months 5 February 2025 Greek Tourism Ministry Monitors Santorini Situation as Seismic Activity Continues 5 February 2025 Global Air Passenger Demand Reaches Record High in 2024, IATA Reports 5 February 2025 Greek PM Reassures Public About Santorini’s Ongoing Seismic Activity 5 February 2025 Milos: Ministry Suspends 5-star Hotel Construction Near Sarakiniko Beach 5 February 2025 ELIME and HELMEPA Join Forces for Safer, More Sustainable Greek Ports 5 February 2025 Leave a Comment Cancel Reply Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Δ