Sunday 22 12 2024 05:47:02 PM

Office Address

123/A, Miranda City Likaoli Prikano, Dope

Phone Number

+0989 7876 9865 9

+(090) 8765 86543 85

Email Address

info@example.com

example.mail@hum.com

International air cargo swells due to increased capacity, Red Sea impact
An increase in capacity and spillover of sea cargo to air routes due to the Red Sea crisis helped Indian airports post double-digit volume growth in April-June quarter on a year-on-year basis.
Dr.G.R.Balakrishnan Aug 06 2024 Logistics News (Airlines & Aviation)

International air cargo swells due to increased capacity, Red Sea impact

Overall international freight handled by airports rose 18.4 per cent to 5.68 lakh metric tonnes in the first quarter of FY25. All the major airports reported growth including Delhi (24 per cent ), Mumbai (12 per cent), Bengaluru (25.4 per cent), and Chennai (10 per cent).

While there was a base impact too as the same quarter last year saw international cargo growth flat, the growth rate recorded was nearly double that witnessed on a full-year basis in fiscal 2024.

"We have seen time-sensitive shipments shift from sea route to air. The trend has been witnessed since February and largely consists of industrial goods, auto parts, machinery, etc. bound for Europe and the US," said Venkatesh Iyer, Vice President (Commercial), Sharaf Cargo Private Ltd.

 

"Cargo vessels are taking up to three extra weeks to reach Europe via Cape of Good Hope. Additionally, there is a shortage of containers, so booking sea freight has become a challenge for exporters. Consequently, air freight rates have doubled between India and Europe over the last year," Iyer added.

Sea ports handle around 90 per cent of India's trade by volume and 70 per cent of its trade by value. The government insists there is no acute shortage of containers in India, and the first quarter of FY25 saw a 4 per cent growth in port traffic.

Yet, even a marginal shift of traffic from sea to air is boosting cargo volumes and yields for airlines.

The Red Sea crisis has driven strong growth for air cargo, but this is mainly benefitting carriers who have capacity into Europe and beyond. The only wide-body capacity that IndiGo has in this category is to Istanbul, and we have greatly benefitted from this,” said Mark Sutch, the airline’s Chief Commercial Officer in charge of cargo. However, on an overall basis, the impact of the Red Sea crisis on IndiGo is limited, as most of its capacity is on domestic and regional international routes.

 

International airlines too are reaping the benefits of high demand. German carrier Lufthansa said it is seeing particularly strong cargo growth on the India-to-Europe route…Other foreign carriers are also adjusting their freighter capacities and striking new partnerships to tap growth from Asia.