HonestABE
Jun 25, 07, 12:42 pm
MSNBC, in a typically mindless posting from BizJournals.com, reports that the BTS first quarter airline statistics showed American Airlines No. 1 in passengers with 23.9 billion passengers "emplaned."
UA only "emplaned" 16.3 billion pax.
By the same report, ATL saw 9.6 billion passengers transit through during the first quarter.
The story is posted below. Emphasis (for humor's sake) added by me.
Delta Air Lines is bigger than United Airlines, and Southwest Airlines is bigger than either, when size is measured by passenger emplanements regardless of length of trip.
US Airways and America West, corporately merged though still working to consolidate operationally, are together larger than either Northwest Airlines or Continental Airlines, according to first quarter emplanement figures released this month by the U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics.
The industry usually measures itself by revenue passenger miles, since longer flights bring in more revenue, and by that metric the largest airlines, in order, are American, United, Delta, Continental and Northwest, Continental having recently expanded its way from fifth to fourth place. Indeed, the BTS figures show that by international emplanements alone the top three are American, United and Continental.
Passenger emplanements, first quarter:
American: 23.3 billion.
Southwest: 22.9 billion.
Delta: 17.1 billion.
United: 16.3 billion.
US Airways-America West: 13.9 billion.
Northwest: 12.9 billion.
Continental: 11.5 billion.
Of the above figures, Delta traffic is down 5.1 percent from year-before levels while Continental is up 4.4 percent; the rest moved less in either direction.
The same report ranked airports by passenger traffic and found that Atlanta's Hartsfield airport is now much busier than Chicago's O'Hare by the only metric passengers care about: how many passengers are passing through the facility.
Top U.S. airports by first quarter emplanements:
1. Atlanta: 9.6 billion. 2. Chicago O'Hare: 8.0 billion. 3. Dallas-Ft. Worth: 6.6 billion. 4. Denver: 5.5 billion. 5. Los Angeles: 5.4 billion. 6. Phoenix: 5.1 billion. 7. Las Vegas: 5.0 billion. 8. Houston: 4.8 billion. 9. Orlando: 4.1 billion. 10. Minneapolis-St. Paul: 4.0 billion. Denver and Orlando stand out in the list for having a very low percentage of international emplanements. Las Vegas has more domestic emplanements than Los Angeles does.
UA only "emplaned" 16.3 billion pax.
By the same report, ATL saw 9.6 billion passengers transit through during the first quarter.
The story is posted below. Emphasis (for humor's sake) added by me.
Delta Air Lines is bigger than United Airlines, and Southwest Airlines is bigger than either, when size is measured by passenger emplanements regardless of length of trip.
US Airways and America West, corporately merged though still working to consolidate operationally, are together larger than either Northwest Airlines or Continental Airlines, according to first quarter emplanement figures released this month by the U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics.
The industry usually measures itself by revenue passenger miles, since longer flights bring in more revenue, and by that metric the largest airlines, in order, are American, United, Delta, Continental and Northwest, Continental having recently expanded its way from fifth to fourth place. Indeed, the BTS figures show that by international emplanements alone the top three are American, United and Continental.
Passenger emplanements, first quarter:
American: 23.3 billion.
Southwest: 22.9 billion.
Delta: 17.1 billion.
United: 16.3 billion.
US Airways-America West: 13.9 billion.
Northwest: 12.9 billion.
Continental: 11.5 billion.
Of the above figures, Delta traffic is down 5.1 percent from year-before levels while Continental is up 4.4 percent; the rest moved less in either direction.
The same report ranked airports by passenger traffic and found that Atlanta's Hartsfield airport is now much busier than Chicago's O'Hare by the only metric passengers care about: how many passengers are passing through the facility.
Top U.S. airports by first quarter emplanements:
1. Atlanta: 9.6 billion. 2. Chicago O'Hare: 8.0 billion. 3. Dallas-Ft. Worth: 6.6 billion. 4. Denver: 5.5 billion. 5. Los Angeles: 5.4 billion. 6. Phoenix: 5.1 billion. 7. Las Vegas: 5.0 billion. 8. Houston: 4.8 billion. 9. Orlando: 4.1 billion. 10. Minneapolis-St. Paul: 4.0 billion. Denver and Orlando stand out in the list for having a very low percentage of international emplanements. Las Vegas has more domestic emplanements than Los Angeles does.