Analysis

Warsaw Frederic Chopin is emerging Europe’s busiest airport

Just two emerging European airports make the top 30 of a new list of the busiest airports in the European Union. The data, published by Eurostat, the EU’s statistics agency, places Warsaw Frederic Chopin in 28th place, slightly ahead of Prague Ruznye, in 29th. Warsaw carried 15.76 million passengers in 2017, a 23 per cent increase on 2016 (and the highest increase amongst airports in the top 30). Prague carried 15.4 million passengers in 2017, an 18 per cent increase on the previous year.

The highest increase at any airport anywhere in the EU was seen at Sofia Airport in Bulgaria, which saw a 30 per cent jump in passenger numbers in 2017, to reach a total of 6.48 million. In fact, all of the region’s main airports saw solid growth, including Bucharest Otopeni (up 16.6 per cent to 12.8 million passengers), Budapest Ferihegy (up 14.6 per cent to 13.03 million passengers).

The only airport in the region which saw a drop in passenger numbers was Vilnius in Lithuania, down 1.4 per cent to 3.76 million passengers per year.

The least busiest airport in a European Union capital city is Ljubljana’s Brnik, which served 1.6 million passengers in 2017, a healthy increase nevertheless on 2016 of almost 20 per cent.

London Heathrow was once again the EU’s busiest airport in 2017, carrying almost 78 million passengers.

Overall in 2017, intra-EU transport represented almost half (47 per cent) of total air passenger transport in the EU and extra-EU transport over a third (36 per cent). National transport accounted for fewer than one in every five passengers (17 per cent).