Thunder Bay Airport (YQT) has seen another year of growth
hitting an all-time high for passenger numbers in 2016 by exceeding 800,000
passengers for the first time – 807,041 passengers to be exact. Some of the recent growth has come from
the depreciation in the Canadian dollar relative to the US dollar, which has
attracted Americans away from airports in Duluth and Minneapolis. This is certainly a welcome development given that market size in northwestern Ontario is relatively stable given population trends. This is also a regional success
story and according to the Thunder Bay International Airport Authority’s
(TBIAA) own estimates generates an estimated $645 million dollars in GDP
annually and creates 5000 jobs.
And of course, one does not need an economic impact study to
see the importance of better air connections to Toronto with three airlines now
competing for your business and offering on weekdays a total of 16 flights
daily (Air Canada-6; Porter – 6; Westjet – 4). When one adds seasonal flights to tropical destinations as
well as assorted regional airlines like Wasaya and Bearskin, It is indeed a
golden age for air travel out of Thunder Bay.
The years 2002, 2005 and 2008 saw large dips in the growth rate as a result of the forest sector crisis and the onset of the Great Recession. There was a substantial rebound starting in 2009 but 2014 and 2015 also witnessed a flattening out of growth. As a result, the increase of 4.5 percent in 2016 is certainly quite welcome and hopefully represents the start of a new growth curve similar to what occurred after 2009. If this new phase of growth is being based on American travelers out of Minnesota taking advantage of a stronger US dollar then the exchange rate as well as border crossing issues will be crucial variables.