Solid and Positive post-pandemic air cargo market expected: IATA

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IATA predicts a positive outlook for air cargo demand and believes it will continue to improve as the vaccine rollout progresses and belly-hold services pick up. Willie Walsh, director general of IATA, said airlines “deserve great credit” for pivoting their business focus away from the passenger operations and towards airfreight in a short time.

Noting the use of preighters, Walsh said“Airlines demonstrated great agility in responding to demand to ensure that there was sufficient supply to meet critical supply chain issues during the pandemic.” He added that as passenger services pick up while the global vaccine rollout progresses, airlines will “shift from survival mode to rebuilding.” “As that happens, we’ll continue to be very focused on the environmental issues that have not in any way bated since we’ve gone through this crisis,” he said. “There is also an immediate focus on the development of sustainable aviation fuels.”

Data will also be essential in air cargo development. Walsh said: “Better data enables us to improve our environmental performance. Better data enables us to assess the risk in a better way, and that enables us to improve our safety performance.”

Market outlook

Brian Pearce, the chief economist at IATA, said air cargo’s recovery from the pandemic is “good,” and airfreight services remain in strong demand. He said: “Shippers and companies need air cargo to rapidly transport components and final products to market as the global economy recovers. This has had a positive impact on the cargo tonne-km (CTK) flow.”

However, recovery is not equally strong on all trade lanes.

Pearce said fast-improving trades include Middle East-Europe and Middle East-Asia. Additionally, recovery in the North Pacific “reflects the fact that we see robust Chinese and US economies, and that’s generating a lot of trade.” By contrast, due to lockdowns, Europe has experienced a weakened economy, so its vital trade lanes have not recovered as strongly.

North America-based airlines have performed well in terms of volumes — they are around 20% up on pre-crisis (2019) levels.

Pearce noted that this contrasts with the slow recovery in Latin America. He attributed this to the “lack of support” given by governments, compared with the support received by North America-based airlines. “We’re now seeing many Latin America-based carriers reorganizing or under bankruptcy protection, and as a result, they’re losing market share,” he said.

Pearce observed that load factors have been high over the last year — some ten percentage points higher than they usually have been. “There has been a severe capacity shortage in the industry because typically 50% or so of cargo would be carried in the holds of passenger aircraft,” and that “Travel restrictions have led to very high loads on aircraft that have been able to fly.”

This has resulted in higher yields, as Pearce noted: “That’s benefited the revenues of the airlines operating in that business, as well as the ones that have pivoted to that business.”

However, Pearce thinks high load factors and high yields are probably going to be temporary.

“We [at IATA] think they’ll continue this year, but they reflect the unusual situation [of the pandemic],” he said. “As travel barriers come down, that situation will normalize.”

Pearce added that cargo sustained the connectivity of some long-haul passenger routes â€” even across the transatlantic market. 

Looking forward, he said: “We’re expecting air cargo to outperform other modes of transport. We saw similar trends following the global financial crisis.

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Devender was born in the year when the Beatles Group was formed. He holds two master’s degrees in English Literature and Public Administration. He also has an Honors degree in English Literature and a post-graduate diploma in Corporate Communications and Public Relations. He was closely associated with the Indian State Transport Undertakings and Ministry of Transport in his role as Corporate Communications and PR specialist for over two decades handling domestic and international organizations. He ventured into business forming his own Media House, Profiles Media Network Private Limited which is now a twenty years old company. Excelling as an editor, Marketing, PR, Anchor, and Advertising specialist, he is now expertly navigating the world of social media. A widely traveled professional internationally, Devender has a deep understanding of the Air Cargo, Cargo Business, Cargo Airports, Freighters and Cargo Industry at large.