Bizav Flying Off To a Good Start in 2017, Says Argus

Results by operational category were positive across the board, with Part 135 and fractional activity each climbing by 4 percent from a year ago.

Business aircraft flight activity in North America got off on the right foot this year, posting a 2 percent year-over-year increase last month, according to TraqPak data released by Argus International. Its outlook for this month is somewhat pessimistic: the company predicts a 0.5 percent downturn from a year ago; however, February 2016 had an extra day due to leap year.

Results by operational category were positive across the board, with Part 135 and fractional activity each climbing 4 percent from a year ago. Part 91 flying eked out only a 0.2 percent gain.

One again, large-cabin jets led in activity by aircraft category, climbing 7.9 percent year-over-year last month. This was followed by a “solid” 3.2 percent rise in midsize jet flying, while light jets declined 0.2 percent and turboprops were flat versus January 2016.

By region, the U.S. Southeast led with 56,840 departures last month, eclipsing the next-busiest region, the Southwest, which logged 32,891 departures, Argus said. Flights during weekdays in January increased 0.7 percent, while weekend flights jumped 4 percent.

Large-cabin jets also dominated in individual categories, with Part 135 and fractional large-cabin-jet flying soaring 11 and 25.1 percent, respectively, year-over-year. Argus TraqPak data provides “flight-number-specific aircraft arrival and departure information on all IFR flights in the U.S., Canada, and the Caribbean.”

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