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Heathrow to lose its European crown to Istanbul, says aviation analyst

Exclusive: ‘By the time international hubs recover, Istanbul’s mega-airport is likely to have established itself as Europe’s busiest’

Simon Calder
Travel Correspondent
Tuesday 20 April 2021 11:07 EDT
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Global ambitions: Istanbul’s new airport
Global ambitions: Istanbul’s new airport (IGA)

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When Heathrow airport and its western European rivals finally emerge from the coronavirus pandemic, they will lag behind Istanbul’s new airport in passenger numbers: that is the view of the aviation analyst Ralph Anker, who is the editor of the Anker Report on airline and airport connectivity.

The expert’s warning came after he revealed that airports in western Europe have lost a far higher proportion of passengers than their rivals in the east – Russia, Turkey and Ukraine.

He told The Independent: “This dramatic shift east in air travel demand is being driven by the huge domestic markets in Russia and Turkey.

“While airports like Heathrow, which rely predominantly on international traffic, will recover eventually, by the time they do Istanbul’s new unconstrained mega-airport is likely to have established itself as Europe’s busiest airport.”

Istanbul’s primary airport, which replaced the old Ataturk hub only two years ago, is expected to be capable of processing 200 million passengers annually within a few years – four times as many as it handled in 2019.

For comparison, in 2019 London Heathrow was busiest in Europe with 81 million passengers, ahead of Paris CDG (76 million), Amsterdam (72 million) and Frankfurt (71 million).

Almost all European airports have seen passenger numbers collapse during the coronavirus crisis, but Heathrow has been particularly hard hit.

The airport handled only 8 per cent of 2019 passengers in March 2021. Amsterdam was next worst among the big four, at 12 per cent, with Paris CDG on 15 per cent and Frankfurt on 16 per cent.

In relative terms, Istanbul did five times better than Heathrow, with 40 per cent of 2019 passengers using the airport in March 2021.

It is the main hub for Turkish Airlines, which flies to more countries in the world than any other carrier.

The Independent has asked Heathrow airport for a response.

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