Tag: Air Transport

Air India scraps cargo plans even as others press ahead news

In a surprise move ensured to delay its air cargo plans for quite a while, Indian flag carrier Air India has decided to exit the cargo space and lease out its freighters. This, even though, cargo is a big revenue earner.

According to reports, Air India is seeking to lease two of its Airbus 310s, which were converted to freighters. The carrier is also converting six Boeing 737-200s into freighters, each with a payload capacity of 12 to 15 tonnes, which will bring its freighter fleet strength to eight.

Freight operations would have commenced under the banner of Air India Cargo (AIC).

Air India Cargo had entered into a leasing agreement for a Boeing 737 with India Post, as well as with domestic logistics major, Gati. India Post intends to lease three more freighters by the end of the year and use them for speed post services to 15 major cities.

Gati plans to charter five or more aircraft from AIC over the next five years.

Reports suggest that AIC could also lease out its freighters to postal services of some East European countries and the US Mail.

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International express fuel surcharges drop as oil prices decline

DHL, FedEx, UPS and TNT have significantly reduced their fuel surcharges for international air express shipments around the world this month against a background of a continued sharp fall in oil prices largely driven by the escalating global financial crisis, CEP-Research analysis shows.

Oil prices have declined sharply from a peak of nearly USD 150 a barrel in July to below USD 85 a barrel this week on the various trading exchanges. In September, the integrator’s fuel surcharges were largely stable and did not fully reflect the downward trend. This is because the four leading express carriers calculate their surcharges based on indexes showing the previous month’s oil price level and announce them in advance for the following month, thus resulting in a two-month time lag between prices and surcharge level.

In October, however, surcharges show a clearly recognisable drop around the globe, with the biggest reductions in the USA, significant falls in Asia and moderate reductions in Europe.

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DHL boosts Asia Air Network with increased dedicated flights

DHL announced that it has increased the frequency of its dedicated Air Hong Kong flights from Hong Kong to Nagoya, Taipei, Seoul and Singapore. Flights to these cities have been increased to six times per week, up from the current five times a week, representing a 20 per cent increase in capacity for each of these four cities.

From October 27, Air Hong Kong, a 60/40 joint venture between Cathay Pacific and DHL, will now operate four additional A300-600 flights on Day 6 on these routes. This represents an increased dedicated capacity of 45 tons per week on each of the four routes to serve the needs of growing intra-Asia trade.

The increased dedicated capacity on the Asia Air Network comes on the back of DHL’s recent announcement of the expansion of its Central Asia Hub (CAH) at Hong Kong International Airport five years ahead of schedule. With a total investment of USD 210 million, the CAH facility is the first large-scale automated Express hub in Asia Pacific with a throughput of 75,000 pieces per hour (pph) of flyers and conveyable shipments, significantly bolstering DHL’s operational capability in Asia.

With over 40 per cent market share and USD 2.2 billion invested in the region, DHL’s investment in the CAH and enhancement of its Asia Air Network provides the core backbone to further enhance service excellence to extend its market-leading position in Asia Pacific.

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DHL launches intra-European airfreight solution

DHL Global Forwarding (DGF), the air and ocean freight business of Deutsche Post World Net announced its intra-European, overnight transport solution for the life sciences industry.

Called “Airfreight Plus for the Life Sciences Industry”, the service combines the speed of express with the individual care of a freight forwarder, providing day-definite, door-to-door delivery of heavyweight goods across 32 European countries. For DGF’s life sciences industry customers, this means not only late cut-off times and next-day service, but also temperature-controlled facilities, minimal tarmac times and dedicated handling of shipments by trained life sciences staff.

Transportation of +2°C to +8°C goods includes door-to-door freight management with LifeConEx, DGF’s joint venture company specializing in the management of temperature-controlled life sciences industry goods. This service is optionally available for ambient shipments as well (+2°C to +25°C).

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The World's Top 50 Cargo Airlines

The first tier of the 2007 Top 50 Cargo Airlines worldwide looks a lot like the 2006 ranking with FedEx Express, UPS, Korean Air and Lufthansa retaining their No. 1 through No. 4 positions. With a 17.4 percent growth last year, Cathay Pacific, and its subsidiary Dragonair, bumped Singapore Airlines from the No. 6 slot, while China Airlines moved up a notch to No. 7, with Air France close behind at No. 8.

FedEx and UPS retained their vaulted positions despite punishing high fuel costs, a faltering economy and a noticeable decline in domestic air cargo. Significant quarterly losses in early 2008 showed how even the integrated express carriers continue to get pounded financially. FedEx lost USD 241 million in the three months ending May 31 compared with a profit of USD 610 million for the same quarter in 2007, while UPS saw its net profit fall 21 percent in its second quarter.

Korean Air, which slowed its growth engine significantly last year in the face of declining yields and migration of traffic to ocean vessels, retained its No. 3 overall position and the airline remains the world’s largest international freight airline with 9.5 million freight tonne kilometers flown.

Air France’s elevation to the No. 8 spot and its partner KLM Cargo’s jump to the No. 12 position from No. 14 can be attributed to a rejuvenation of its fleet and tight cost controls, which has seen a significant bump in profits.

The fastest growing carrier last year among the Top 50 airlines was Shanghai Airlines, which jumped from No. 57 to No. 42 and expanded its business 60.8 percent. Following close behind was No. 33 Qatar Airways, which posted a 50.6 percent growth from 2006 to 2007.

The long-term growth of the industry remains in parts of Asia and the Middle East, where Emirates moved up to the No. 9 spot from No. 12 despite slowing from 19.9 percent growth the year before. Air China, the world’s fifth largest domestic cargo carrier, grew 12.3 percent last year and moved up to No. 16 from No. 18.

Not all Asia and Middle East carriers showed traffic gains in 2007. Nippon Cargo Airlines, which slipped to No. 28 from No. 26, showed a 17.2 percent decline in traffic last year over 2006. Gulf Air’s growth dropped 26.5 percent in 2007, the second straight annual decline.

A number of combination carriers posted modest gains or losses in air freight traffic. Yet United Airlines, at No. 18, showed 15.6 percent traffic growth last year. American Airlines retained its No. 20 position, increasing traffic 4 percent in 2007. Northwest Airlines, which left Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2007 and is awaiting regulatory approval to merge with Delta Air Lines, posted a 9.4 percent decline in traffic in 2007, dropping to No. 19 from No. 17.

The top 50 list is based on freight traffic, measured in freight tonne kilometers flown, reported by the International Air Transport Association and on figures provided by airlines.

In a change from previous years, we have sought to include only carriers in scheduled service rather than “wet lease” carriers. That means that carriers such as Atlas Air, Evergreen International Airlines, Air Atlanta Icelandic and the defunct Gemini Air Cargo are not included. U.S. carrier ABX Air operates largely on an ACMI basis, is included mostly as a proxy for DHL in the United States.

Our goal remains to show the relative scale of all carriers that fly cargo. Carriers that have ceased operations are not listed in this year’s top 50.

Where available, we have included revenue figures and notable orders for aircraft, particularly freighters.

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The Mail & Express Review (MER) Magazine is our quarterly print publication. Packed with original content and thought-provoking features, MER is a must-read for those who want the inside track on the industry.

 

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