IATA: INSUFFICIENT CAPACITY DAMPENS AIR CARGO IN AUGUST

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) said global air freight markets in August showed that improvement remains slow amid insufficient capacity and demand moved slightly in a positive direction month-on-month; however, levels remain depressed compared to 2019.

 

In a statement, IATA noted that improvement continues, nonetheless, albeit at a slower pace than some of the traditional leading indicators would suggest.

 

It said this is due to the capacity constraint from the loss of available belly cargo space as passenger aircraft remain parked.  

  

IATA said global demand, measured in cargo tonne-kilometres (CTKs), was 12.6% below previous-year levels in August and recorded a 14% drop in international operations — representing a "modest improvement" from the 14.4% year-on-year drop recorded in July.  

 

Drop in capacity persists

 

Global capacity, measured in available cargo tonne-kilometres (ACTKs), also shrank by 29.4% in August — declining by 31.6% specifically for international operations compared to the previous year and IATA noted is "basically unchanged" from the 31.8% year-on-year drop seen in July. 

 

"Belly capacity for international air cargo was 67% below the levels of August 2019 owing to the withdrawal of passenger services amid the COVID-19 pandemic. This was partially offset by a 28.1% increase in dedicated freighter capacity," IATA said.

 

It noted that daily widebody freighter utilization is close to 11 hours per day, the highest levels since these figures have been tracked in 2012. 

 

Cargo demand increasing 

 

“Air cargo demand improved by 1.8 percentage points in August compared to July. That’s still down 12.6% on previous year levels and well below the 5.1% improvement in the manufacturing PMI. Improvement is being stalled by capacity constraints as large parts of the passenger fleet, which normally carries 50% of all cargo, remain grounded," said  Alexandre de Juniac, IATA's Director General and CEO.

 

“The peak season for air cargo will start in the coming weeks, but with severe capacity constraints shippers may look to alternatives such as ocean and rail to keep the global economy moving,” he added.

 

August Regional Performance

 

IATA reported that airlines in the Asia Pacific, in North America, in Europe and Latin America declined while Middle Eastern and African carriers saw a slight improvement for the month.