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Airport
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Dubai airport has soared
ahead of London's Heathrow, riding a boom in long-haul flights between Asia and
the West to become the world's top international travel hub, it said Tuesday.
AFP reports traffic at the airport
increased 6.1 percent last year to 70.47 million passengers, Dubai Airports
said, adding that it expected a further surge in traveller numbers in 2015.
Dubai International is
home to Emirates, the Middle East's largest carrier, which along with Abu
Dhabi's Etihad and Qatar Airways has seized a significant portion of travel
between the West, Asia and Australasia.
"This historic
milestone is the culmination of over five decades of double-digit average
growth," Dubai Airports Chairman Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed al-Maktoum said in
a statement.
"The shared goal is
to make Dubai a global centre of aviation and we are nearing that goal,"
he said.
Dubai Airports CEO Paul
Griffiths said Dubai International would boost its annual capacity to 90
million passengers this year with the opening of Concourse D -- a new hall for
arrivals and departures. Oil-poor Dubai has spent
years trying to diversify its economy with core sectors now including trade,
transport and tourism. Aided by a rapid
expansion in capacity, aviation is expected to account for more than a third of
the emirate's GDP by 2020.
London Heathrow by
contrast has struggled to grow, with a commission still studying proposals to
increase capacity there and at Gatwick airport, south of London.
The two are among five
airports serving the UK capital that form the busiest hub in the world with
around 135 million passengers a year.
Heathrow handled 68.1
million international passengers in 2014, according to airport figures.
The British hub still
outclassed Dubai International in overall numbers, handling 73.4 million
passengers if travellers on domestic flights are included.
- Superjumbo passenger boom -
Dubai's increase in
passenger numbers comes despite a slight fall in the number of flights taking
off in 2014, due to 80-day runway refurbishment project.
Emirates Airline in
particular has bought more wide-bodied aircraft, including the world's largest
fleet of Airbus A380 superjumbos, helping the average number of passengers per
flight at Dubai to grow to more than 200.
Dubai's surge in traffic
"is no doubt due to the massive A380 fleet at Emirates," said
aviation expert Addison Schonland.
"The airline has
proven the A380 can be used anywhere in a profitable way. If Emirates keeps
growing as it has so far, Dubai’s airport will have to keep growing along with
it," said Schonland, a US-based consultant with AirInsight.
Flights to and from
Western Europe saw the biggest passenger growth in Dubai, followed closely by
destinations in the Indian subcontinent, Asia and North America.
European airlines, notably
Air France-KLM and Lufthansa, have voiced concern at increased activity by
Gulf-based companies, complaining of differences in taxation that they say
cause unfair competition.
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