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Air freight rates head back to earth as virus-driven boom cools

An air cargo boom driven by demand for protective gear against the coronavirus has peaked.

Rates, while still 50% above normal levels, are falling in a worrying trend for airlines relying on freight revenue in the absence of passengers. 

Declining prices may deal a blow to carriers that are scrambling to move cargo to offset weak passenger revenues as they rebuild networks by flying reopened routes with half-empty cabins. 

“The early-mover advantage has disappeared and I can see why some of the rates are coming down,” said Phil Seymour, president of aviation consulting firm IBA. 

“The market is becoming flooded with belly freight capacity,” he added. 

About half of the air cargo carried worldwide normally flies in the belly of passenger jets rather than in dedicated freighters. 

But flight cuts due to weak travel demand squeezed freight capacity at a time when demand for masks, gloves and other protective gear was surging, leading many airlines to fly empty passenger jets as freighters. 

Global air cargo capacity was down 27% in the week starting May 31 compared with a year ago, according to Accenture data, but capacity is rising as passenger flights return. 

Air freight rates from China to the US surged to more than $7 a kilogram in April and May and China-Europe rates were at more than $6 a kilo, Frederic Horst of Cargo Facts Consulting said. 

Rates have since softened, although they remain 40%-50% above normal levels closer to $3 a kilo, he added. 

The International Air Transport Association estimates cargo will contribute 26% of airline industry revenue in 2020, up from 12% in 2019.

This is due mostly to a sharp fall in passenger revenue that will lead to forecast losses of more than $84 billion.

Air freight demand had been depressed before the pandemic due to subdued global economic growth and a US-China trade war and recessionary conditions will make for a slow recovery, said Oliver Plogmann, Singapore-based aviation lead at Accenture. 

“We estimate around 100 passenger freighters are flying globally and we think the number is going to reduce over the next weeks and months when more capacity comes back into the market because it is simply not viable,” he said. 

Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific Airways, one of the world’s biggest freight carriers, said last week that demand for medical supplies had softened in the latter half of May.

It flew nearly 900 cargo flights with passenger planes in May but that could be reduced as demand falls. 

Taiwan’s China Airlines said it was concerned about the outlook for cargo given there was no obvious global economic recovery trend. 

Analysts noted that PPE (personal protective equipment) via air freight has drastically slowed down in the last couple of couple weeks, and it is probably because the second round can afford to go ocean freight. 

Logistics group CH Robinson said it helped the state of Minnesota save $500,000 in shipping costs for surgical gowns by selecting fast boat services over air freight.

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