The International Air Transport Association (IATA) released data for global air freight markets in July showing air cargo demand is stable but at lower levels than 2019.
While there is some month-to-month improvement, it is at a slower pace than some of the traditional leading indicators would suggest.
IATA noted that this is due to the capacity constraint from the loss of available belly cargo space as passenger aircraft remain parked.
Modest improvement
Global demand, measured in cargo tonne-kilometres (CTKs), fell by 13.5% in July (-15.5% for international operations) compared to the previous year. That is a modest improvement from the 16.6% year-on-year drop recorded in June. Seasonally-adjusted demand grew by 2.6% month-on-month in July.
Global capacity, measured in available cargo tonne-kilometres (ACTKs), however, shrank by 31.2% in July ( 32.9% for international operations) compared to the previous year. This also marked a small improvement from the 33.4% year-on-year drop in June.
During the period, belly capacity for international air cargo dropped by 70.5% in July compared to the previous year owing to the withdrawal of passenger services amid the COVID-19 pandemic. This was partially offset by a 28.8% increase in capacity through expanded use of freighter aircraft.
IATA noted that economic activity continued to recover in July reflected in the performance of the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), an indicator of economic health in the manufacturing sector.
IATA said new export orders component of the manufacturing PMI rose by 3.5 points compared to June and was up 19.8 points since April. The PMI tracking global manufacturing output returned to above 50, consistent with month-on-month growth in output
Much-stronger cargo than pax
“Economic indicators are improving, but we have not yet seen that fully reflected in growing air cargo shipments. That said, air cargo is much stronger than the passenger side of the business,” said Alexandre de Juniac, IATA's Director General and CEO.
And one of its biggest challenges according to IATA remains to be accommodating demand with severely reduced capacity.
"If borders remain closed, travel curtailed and passenger fleets grounded, the ability of air cargo to keep the global economy moving will be challenged,” de Juniac added.
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