Brisbane Airport - Traffic and Statistics

Traffic and Statistics

Brisbane Airport, along with Sydney Airport, Melbourne Airport and Perth Airport, have had terminal modifications to accommodate the new Airbus A380, The A380 first arrived at Brisbane on 14 November 2005. Brisbane Airport's annual passenger numbers are expected to reach more than 25.6 million by 2015 and around 50 million by 2035 Brisbane Airport recorded more than 18.5 million passengers in 2007–08. 4.1 million of those were international, with the remaining 14.4 million being domestic

Busiest International Routes – Brisbane Airport (YE June 2011)
Rank Airport Passengers Handled % Change
1 01 ! New Zealand, Auckland 736,205 08 !1.8
2 09 ! Singapore, Singapore-Changi 701,703 09 !1.5
3 02 ! New Zealand, Christchurch 320,665 10 !4.6
4 06 ! United States, Los Angeles 312,968 04 !5.5
5 05 ! Hong Kong, Hong Kong 267,194 05 !3.8
6 04 ! United Arab Emirates, Dubai 250,058 06 !3.7
7 07 ! Fiji, Nadi 202,663 03 !6.0
8 10 ! New Zealand, Wellington 178,431 07 !2.8
9 08 ! Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby 169,112 02 !11.9
10 03 ! Indonesia, Denpasar 162,909 01 !23.8
Busiest Domestic Routes – Brisbane Airport (YE October 2010)
Rank Airport Passengers Handled % Change
1 11 ! New South Wales, Sydney 4,376,500 07 !2.8
2 06 ! Victoria, Melbourne 2,944,700 01 !9.1
3 02 ! Queensland, Cairns 1,147,500 09 !1.0
4 12 ! Queensland, Townsville 933,900 10 !2.4
5 05 ! Queensland, Mackay 772,900 05 !3.7
6 08 ! Western Australia, Perth 744,600 04 !3.8
7 01 ! South Australia, Adelaide 699,400 02 !8.4
8 10 ! Queensland, Rockhampton 630,400 03 !5.0
9 03 ! Australian Capital Territory, Canberra 610,300 08 !0.7
10 07 ! New South Wales, Newcastle 578,900 06 !3.0
11 04 ! Northern Territory, Darwin 367,800 11 !3.6
12 09 ! Queensland, Proserpine 210,900 12 !5.2

Read more about this topic:  Brisbane Airport

Famous quotes containing the words traffic and, traffic and/or statistics:

    If you don’t have a policeman to stop traffic and let you walk across the street like you are somebody, how are you going to know you are somebody?
    John C. White (b. 1924)

    Too much traffic with a quotation book begets a conviction of ignorance in a sensitive reader. Not only is there a mass of quotable stuff he never quotes, but an even vaster realm of which he has never heard.
    Robertson Davies (b. 1913)

    We ask for no statistics of the killed,
    For nothing political impinges on
    This single casualty, or all those gone,
    Missing or healing, sinking or dispersed,
    Hundreds of thousands counted, millions lost.
    Karl Shapiro (b. 1913)