Main functions of state regulation are performed by the State Institution — Civil Aviation Committee of the Ministry of Industry and Infrastructure Development of the Republic of Kazakhstan — an agency of the Ministry of Industry and Infrastructure Development of the Republic of Kazakhstan, which performs regulatory, implementation and control functions, as well as participates in implementation of the strategic functions of the Ministry in the field of civil aviation.
At the same time, in 2019, the Aviation Administration of Kazakhstan began its activities with 100% state participation, whose main function is technical control and supervision in the field of flight safety and aviation security.
The created model is similar to the model of the British State Civil Aviation Agency (UK CAA), which is also a state corporation. The Administration is funded by international air navigation fees, which is also used in foreign practice.
This approach has been introduced for the first time in Kazakhstan and among the CIS coun-tries. A similar management model is common in all the states of the European Aviation Safe-ty Agency (EASA), is used in developed countries (Singapore, UAE, France, etc.) and is recog-nized by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO).
According to the comments from sources, the Aviation Administration of Kazakhstan is charac-terized by flexible and advanced approaches, whereas the Civil Aviation Committee is more characterized by a bureaucratic approach.
By the end of 2023, Kazakhstan airlines, according to the Ministry of Transport of the Republic of Kazakhstan, transported 13.3 million passengers, which is 15% more than in 2022. This result became another historical record for passenger air transportation. The previous record was set in 2022, when 11.5 million people used air transport in Kazakhstan. In pre-pandemic 2019, the volume of passenger air traffic amounted to 8.6 million people. At the same time, in 2023, Kazakhstan’s airports served a total of more than 26 million passengers (an increase of 22%), that is, foreign air carriers occupy almost 50% of the air transportation market in Kazakhstan.
Cargo transportation in January-December 2023 amounted to 23.8 thousand tons, which was by 2.9% less than a year earlier. Out of these, 14.2 thousand tons were accounted for in Almaty, 6.4 thousand tons — in Shymkent, 3.2 thousand tons — in Astana.
In the conditions of the virtually closed airspace of the Russian Federation, Kazakhstan is be-coming increasingly attractive for transit flights. In 2023, the air navigation system of Kazakh-stan handled about 415 thousand flights, of which transit amounted to about 263 thousand flights, i.e. more than 63%.
According to the Ministry of Transport, the volume of domestic air traffic has fully recovered and amounted to 640 flights per week on 50 routes as of the end of 2023. In order to ensure transport accessibility to socially significant destinations and the development of domestic tourism, 23 domestic air routes in seven regions are subsidized.
International air traffic is operated to 28 countries, in 2023 new flights to 13 countries were resumed and opened on 23 routes with a frequency of 57 flights per week. According to the Ministry, the route network with the countries of the Persian Gulf, Asia and Europe is expand-ing rapidly. In total, international flights are operated on 86 routes with a frequency of 484 flights per week, and 48 of these routes are operated by the country’s largest carrier, the Air Astana group, which also includes the low-cost airline FlyArystan.
In January-December 2023, investments in fixed assets in the field of air transport in Kazakh-stan reached 57.7 billion tenge, which is 2.3 times more than a year earlier. The largest volume of investments fell on Shymkent: 34.4 billion versus 4.4 billion tenge a year earlier. Another 17.8 billion tenge was directed to Almaty, 5.4 billion tenge — to Astana, 27.4 million tenge — to the Almaty region.
The revenues of air transport enterprises from transportation amounted to 745.1 billion tenge, including 731.9 billion tenge from passenger transportation, and 13.2 billion tenge from cargo and baggage transportation.
In 2023, Kazakhstan airlines received 10 long-haul aircraft: the flagship Air Astana received one Airbus A321LR, the low-cost airline FlyArystan received five A320s, the private airline SCAT re-ceived four Boeing 737s, as a result of which the total carrying capacity increased by 26% - from 12 to 15 thousand seats. By the end of 2025, in accordance with the current signed agreements, the air fleet will be replenished with another 25 aircraft. Thus, the number of air-craft will increase to 124, and the carrying capacity will increase by another 32%.
In December 2023, Kazakh Minister of Transport Marat Karabayev said that in the next six years, the number of air passengers in Kazakhstan will at least double, and cargo transporta-tion will increase eightfold by 2030. According to the Minister, in order to develop the cargo transportation segment, three new air cargo carriers are at the creation stage, but he did not disclose the details.
In order to overcome the shortage of personnel in civil aviation, according to Marat Karabaev, "the issue of training specialists according to the standards of the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) is being worked out with the involvement of a strategic partner — the National School of Civil Aviation of France" (ENAC, Ecole Nationale de l’Aviation Civile).
At the end of January 2024, Minister of Transport Marat Karabayev announced that Kazakhstan was ready to transfer its airports under the management of European investors. The largest airports of the republic — Astana and Almaty — are already under the management of foreign holdings. "We are ready to transfer the remaining 22 airports in Kazakhstan to the private sec-tor under the management of European investors. There is great potential for becoming a transit hub between Asia and Europe," Karabayev said.