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Thursday, April 18, 2024 21:26 GMT
Middle Eastern carriers reported a decline of 2.2% in year-on-year international cargo volumes in November, a 1.1% deterioration from October, according to figures released by the International Air Transport Association (Iata). The lack of international connectivity is hampering air cargo recovery in the region, however seasonally adjusted demand remains on an upward trend. International capacity decreased by 18.6%. Latin American (-19.4%) and European (-13.7%) carriers suffered sizeable declines in year-on-year growth in international air cargo demand in November 2020, while Asia-Pacific (-9.5%) carriers experienced more moderate falls. Middle East, North America and Africa recorded nominal declines of -2.2%, -1% and -1.7% in November 2020.Data released by Iata for global air freight markets in November 2020 showed that freight volumes improved compared to October, but remain depressed compared to 2019. Capacity remains constrained from the loss of available belly cargo space as passenger aircraft remain parked. • Global demand, measured in cargo ton-kilometers (CTKs*), was 6.6% below previous-year levels in November (-7.7% for international operations). This was on par with the 6.2% year-on-year drop in October. The year-on-year decline is skewed as November 2019 had a boost in demand from the waning US-China trade war.• Seasonally adjusted demand (SA CTKs) continued to improve, increasing 1.6% month-on-month in November. This was a slight improvement over the monthly growth rate of 1.1% in October. Current month-on-month gains indicate that SA CTKs will return to 2019 levels around March or April 2021.• Global capacity, measured in available cargo ton-kilometers (ACTKs), shrank by 20% in November (21.3% for international operations) compared to the previous year. That is nearly three times larger than the contraction in demand. The capacity crunch is caused by a 53% decrease in in belly capacity. This has only been partially offset by a 20% increase in freighter capacity. • Strong regional variations continue with North American carriers reporting year-on-year gains in demand (+5%), while all other regions remained in negative territory compared to a year earlier.• Economic conditions in November, normally the peak season for air cargo, remained positive: • The new export orders component of the manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) remained in growth territory in both developed and emerging markets for the third month in a row after two years of indicating negative growth. • Retail sales for November were up by around 5% over 2019 for both China and the US, propelled by events like Black Friday and Singles Day. “Air cargo demand is still down 6.6% compared to the previous year, however we are seeing continuing month-on-month improvements. Severe capacity constraints persist as large parts of the passenger fleet remain grounded. This will put pressure on the industry as it gears up to deliver vital Covid-19 vaccines,” said Alexandre de Juniac, IATA's Director General and CEO.