In 2017, the Finnish airport company Finavia served nearly 22.7 million passengers at its 21 airports. Helsinki Airport, the largest airport in Finland, broke its record with nearly 19 million passengers in a year. The Lapland airports in Northern Finland achieved their milestone of one million air passengers earlier in the year than ever before.
For the entire country, the passenger numbers increased by 10.8 percent in December and a total of 9.2 percent in 2017. The growth reflects the excellent year of the Finnish airline Finnair, the allure of Finland and the increasingly important status of Helsinki Airport as a hub in the European air traffic for Asian passengers.
For Finavia, 2017 was a record-breaking year. Our various figures reached new millions as expected, although faster than predicted, says Joni Sundelin, senior vice president, sales & network at Finavia.
According to statistics, Helsinki Airport served a total of more than 18.9 million passengers in 2017. The passenger number of the largest airport in Finland increased by a total of 9.9 percent in one year and that of international air traffic by 11.4 percent.
We are discussing new routes, added flights and the use of larger aircraft with a number of airlines. Finland is currently quite an attractive destination, and when the overall capacity of many airlines in terms of offered passenger-kilometres has increased, it is reflected in our figures. In 2017, we also welcomed three new airlines who started operating at Helsinki Airport, says Sundelin.
Lapland, the Finnish winter wonderland
The second largest increase in passenger numbers after Helsinki Airport was seen at Finavia’s airports in Lapland. However, the passenger numbers at Oulu, the largest airport in Finland after Helsinki Airport, remained slightly under one million due to a runway renovation in the summer.
Finnish Lapland is an increasingly popular destination. Passengers on chartered and scheduled flights as well as international celebrities and other private plane users wish to experience the magic of Lapland and visit its most famous resident, Santa Claus. A number of our airports in Lapland saw record-breaking figures in 2017. Rovaniemi Airport, the Santa's official airport, for example, served more than 570,000 passengers. Just like last year, this winter is becoming extremely successful in terms of passenger numbers in Northern Finland, predicts Sundelin.
Seven out of ten passengers on scheduled international flights still from the EU
As usual, the largest numbers of passengers in 2017 came from Germany, Sweden, Spain and Great Britain. Passengers from the EU represented more than 71.4 percent of all passengers on scheduled flights. However, the numbers of passengers from Japan, China, Russia and Hong Kong saw the largest growth at Helsinki Airport.
As the number of passengers on international, scheduled flights from EU countries in Finland increased in one year by 9.7 percent and from other European countries by 13.4 percent, the growth rate from the rest of the world, according to our statistics, was 20 percent. This was particularly influenced by a new airline, new airline routes and added capacity. In 2016, there were only about 20,000 passengers from Qatar, for example, but last year, the number increased to more than 100,000. Passengers from Japan outnumbered those from, for example, the Netherlands, France or Italy, and passengers from China outnumbered those from Russia, says Sundelin.
Helsinki Airport is a vital hub in the air traffic of Northern Europe, especially for Asian passengers. In 2017, the number of transit passengers at Helsinki Airport increased by 17.6 percent. The growth was particularly strong during the last six month of the year, reaching a difference of up to 25 percent to the corresponding period of the previous year at a monthly level.
The financial performance data of Finavia from 2017 will be published at the beginning of March.