Montreal: Budget carriers continued to push global air traffic to new record levels last year, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) said on Wednesday.

Scheduled air services carried “a new record” of 4.1 billion passengers in 2017, an increase of 7.1 per cent over the previous year, ICAO said, citing preliminary data.

The figure compares with six per cent growth in 2016.

“The sustainability of the tremendous growth in international civil air traffic is demonstrated by the continuous improvements to its safety, security, efficiency and environmental footprint,” ICAO Council president Olumuyiwa Benard Aliu said in a statement from the Montreal-based agency.

Early this month, two industry studies showed that last year was the safest for civil aviation since plane crash statistics were first compiled in 1946.

A total of 10 crashes of civil passenger and cargo planes claimed 44 lives, said the Aviation Safety Network. A separate report from the To70 agency said no major airline crashed a plane in 2017.

ICAO, a United Nations agency, said Wednesday that low-cost carriers flew an estimated 1.2 billion passengers or about 30 per cent of the global total last year.

The budget airline sector “consistently grew at a faster pace compared to the world average growth, and its market share continued to increase, specifically in emerging economies,” ICAO said.

It added that air travel demand growth has been supported by improving global economic conditions.

In terms of Revenue Passenger Kilometres (RPKs), a measure of total distance flown by paying passengers, international passenger traffic rose 8.0 per cent, up from 7.8 per cent the previous year, ICAO said.

All regions showed stronger growth, except the Middle East, where factors including competition between hubs, low oil prices and a strong dollar led to “a significant decline in growth,” to 6.9 per cent from 11.8 per cent a year earlier, the agency said.

Europe remained the largest international market with a 37 per cent share of world international RPKs, up 8.1 per cent, ICAO said.

Latin American and Caribbean airlines saw the strongest RPK growth with 10 per cent, while Asia-Pacific grew 9.6 per cent, Africa 7.6 per cent and North America was slowest at 4.9 per cent.

ICAO noted that average jet fuel prices rose by about 25 per cent last year but remained significantly below levels in the previous decade.

The industry was expected to end 2017 with another record operating profit, of around $60 billion, ICAO said.