Boeing predicts that passenger aviation traffic in Southeast Asia will triple over the next 20 years due to the region's expanding middle class and faster-than-average economic growth. To fulfil the growing demand for air travel, the region's fleet of aircraft is also expected to more than triple to 4,960 jets; according to Boeing's 2024 Commercial Market Outlook (CMO), the company's long-term demand prediction for commercial aircraft and services.
Southeast Asia Air Travel Soars
According to the CMO, passenger air traffic in Southeast Asia will grow 7.2% annually through 2043—well above the 4.7% average annual growth rate globally.
“With Southeast Asia’s economy forecast to have the second-highest growth rate among global regions, rising household incomes will bring new consumers into this aviation market, fueling growth for low-cost and leisure business models,” said David Schulte, managing director of Boeing Commercial Marketing for Northeast Asia, Southeast Asia and Oceania.
“Southeast Asia’s growing fleet – especially single-aisle aeroplanes – will play an important role in further connecting the region’s island geography and serving travel demand across the Asia-Pacific region, particularly routes to China and Northeast Asia,” Schulte said.
Through 2043, Boeing also forecasts:
- Airlines in Southeast Asia will expand their share of the Asia-Pacific fleet from 17% to 25%.
- To meet long-haul demand, widebodies like the 787 Dreamliner will make up one in five deliveries in Southeast Asia.
- The region will need more than 120 new and converted freighters to support increasingly diversified global supply chains and growing e-commerce demand.
- Southeast Asia operators must hire and train 234,000 new pilots, maintenance technicians and cabin crew – more than tripling the region’s active personnel.
Southeast Asia’s commercial aviation industry continues to focus on improving sustainability. Nearly 1,200 new, more fuel-efficient aeroplanes will replace ageing jets in the region over the next 20 years. Also, as global aviation aims to achieve net zero by 2050, this region’s available bio-based feedstocks can supply approximately 12% of global sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) demand, according to the Boeing-supported SAF feedstock assessment.