Quote:
Originally Posted by Austin1971
I'd love to know how many international passengers originate at ABIA but have to connect via an international gateway to get to their final destination. That's where you need to look.....Austin will continue to grow and the airlines will fill the niche. It's all about profit. Austin is one of a few airports that doesn't need to subsidize routes. As the metro grows so will the airport connectivity to the world. The B787 is the perfect airframe to make that happen.....
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I found this information on another board.
For international traffic, there is a recent Brookings Institute report that was recently released, and has 2011 O&D pax traffic for top U.S. metro areas to/from ex-border destinations. Here is the site below.
http://www.brookings.edu/research/interactives/aviation
it opens with the NYC metro area, but up near the top if you see
"Click
here to choose a different metro area"
then a pulldown menu will give the option to the data of the Top 90 U.S. metro areas.
International travel to and from: Austin-Round Rock-San Marcos, TX
2003 - 427,931
2011 - 527,373* (up 23.2% from 2003)
* includes international departures
and arrivals.
Scroll down that page a little more and it gives the world region share of passengers. Looks like like Latin America/Caribbean, Western Europe, and North America (Mexico & Canada?) are the top three regions.
Austin ranked 34th out of 90 metro areas for international travelers. 1.8% of international travelers flew nonstop to/from Austin, and the rest made a transfer along the way.
Compare that to San Antonio. They had 556,600 international passengers in 2011 and ranked 33rd out of 90 metro areas for international travelers, but 23.9% of their international travelers flew nonstop, while the rest made a transfer along the way (because they have a lot more international flights than we do.)