Cairns Airport - Operations

Operations

Cairns Airport statistics
Year Total Passengers
2010-11 3,859,339
2009-10 3,550,240
2008-09 3,653,544
2007-08 3,777,154
2006-07 3,782,183
2005-06 3,731,178
1999-2000 2,718,378
1994-95 2,418,847
1989-1990 840,392
1985-86 578,294
Busiest domestic routes into and out of Cairns Airport (YE June 2011)
Rank Airport Passengers % change
1 01 ! Queensland, Brisbane 1,144,836 04 !1.2
2 03 ! New South Wales, Sydney 891,294 03 !5.6
3 02 ! Victoria, Melbourne 500,027 01 !30.2
4 04 ! Queensland, Townsville 186,525 02 !9.4
Busiest international routes into and out of Cairns Airport (YE June 2011)
Rank Airport Passengers handled % change
1 07 ! Japan, Tokyo-Narita 144,134 06 !6.2
2 05 ! Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby 97,446 03 !37.2
3 04 ! Japan, Osaka-Kansai 71,879 01 !335.1
4 01 ! New Zealand, Auckland 66,631 02 !45.0
5 03 ! Hong Kong, Hong Kong 58,502 05 !5.9
6 06 ! Singapore, Singapore-Changi 43,501 04 !6.8
7 02 ! Guam, Guam 28,883 07 !22.5
Busiest international freight routes into and out of Cairns Airport (FY 2011)
Rank Airport Freight handled % change
1 03 ! Hong Kong, Hong Kong 2,728.3 05 !9.6
2 07 ! Japan, Tokyo-Narita 2,113.2 04 !3.1
3 04 ! Japan, Osaka-Kansai 643.4 01 !687.4
4 05 ! Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby 306.6 03 !6.4
5 01 ! New Zealand, Auckland 131.3 02 !7.5
6 02 ! Guam, Guam 19.2 06 !12.4
7 06 ! Singapore, Singapore-Changi 0.0 07 !100

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Famous quotes containing the word operations:

    You can’t have operations without screams. Pain and the knife—they’re inseparable.
    —Jean Scott Rogers. Robert Day. Mr. Blount (Frank Pettingell)

    A sociosphere of contact, control, persuasion and dissuasion, of exhibitions of inhibitions in massive or homeopathic doses...: this is obscenity. All structures turned inside out and exhibited, all operations rendered visible. In America this goes all the way from the bewildering network of aerial telephone and electric wires ... to the concrete multiplication of all the bodily functions in the home, the litany of ingredients on the tiniest can of food, the exhibition of income or IQ.
    Jean Baudrillard (b. 1929)

    It may seem strange that any road through such a wilderness should be passable, even in winter, when the snow is three or four feet deep, but at that season, wherever lumbering operations are actively carried on, teams are continually passing on the single track, and it becomes as smooth almost as a railway.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)