Friday, July 26, 2013


China Southern Airlines launched its third scheduled freighter service from Guangzhou to Europe.
The new service to Frankfurt operates three times a week using a Boeing 777-200F. Flights depart every Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
The Guangzhou-Frankfurt-Guangzhou service will provide 270 tonnes capacity per week. The import and export cargo between China and Germany is mostly high value-added cargo such as machinery and precision instruments.
Frankfurt is the most important origin and destination city in Germany for international cargo.
In 2009, China Southern’s Frankfurt Office was established when the airline launched its Shanghai-Frankfurt-Shanghai freighter service. With the cooperation of local trucking companies, cargo can be transported all over Europe.
China Southern will receive two more B777 freighters in the second half of 2013.
Source: http://www.aircargoworld.com/Air-Cargo-News/2013/07/china-southern-begins-guangzhou-frankfurt-freighter-service/2514640#sthash.tHh8waBJ.dpuf

THE introduction of daily flights by Emirates SkyCargo and Air France-KLM over the next 12 months would be expected to contribute to the continuing growth at Dubai World Central – Al Maktoum International.  
  Emirates SkyCargo has confirmed that all dedicated freight flights would be operated from its new base at DWC when it opens in May 2014, while Air France-KLM would relocate its regional hub to the airport from August this year.
  “The introduction of daily scheduled cargo flights by Emirates SkyCargo as well as Air France-KLM will provide a significant fillip to growth. As the airport matures, we will not be able to sustain the triple-digit increases experienced in the first few years of operations, but we expect volume growth to resume, albeit at a more moderate pace,” said Dubai Airports Chief Executive Officer, Paul Griffiths.
  During the first six months of 2013, air movements rose 37 per cent to 10,237, up from 7,474 movements in the first half of 2012. 
  For the second quarter of 2013 air movements rose 35.4 per cent to 6,133, up from 3,961 in the three months to June 2012. The jump in air movements was driven by a surge in general aviation and training flights since the start of the year.
  Recent fluctuations in charter traffic have seen freight volumes at Dubai World Central – Al Maktoum International dip in the first six months of 2013.
  Freight volumes fell 3.2 per cent to 102, 929 tonnes in the first six months of the year, down from 106, 333 tonnes in the same period in 2012. For the second quarter volumes fell 13 per cent to 48,955, down from 56, 271 in the second quarter of 2012. The fall comes as freight volumes stabilise after the rapid growth in the first few years of cargo operations at the airport. DWC opened for freight operations in June 2010.
Source: http://www.ngrguardiannews.com/index.php/business-travel/128073-emirates-air-france-klm-to-boost-cargo-traffic-

Cargo movement at the Chennai Airport has been sluggish for almost a year now, but things have become particularly bad over the last week, prompting trade bodies like South Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry to write to the Revenue Department.
According to agents who belong to the Chennai Customs House Agents Association, things have gone from “bad to worse” after air customs officers were called for an investigation on July 18, after which they have been “reluctant and non-compliant” to clear the export and import cargo lying there. Cargo movement in May was down by 9% (international cargo) and 11% (domestic), signifying a bad trend for the industry.
Airport sources have revealed that the customs personnel are resentful of the fact that their officials were allegedly called for an inquiry by the CBI for clearing a consignment of chemicals sans proper documentation. This has reportedly been done on a direction from the High Court, though customs officials were reluctant to confirm the same. “There is a lot of cargo that needs to be cleared and we are working with the limited resources we have,” said an official.
Agents have listed frequent strikes, malfunctions with the Indian Customs Electronic Data Interchange System and general apathy of officials as other reasons for the cargo pile-up.
A SICCI communique lambasted the attitude of officials as “non-cooperative” and said that they were dragging their feet to clear even routine paperwork.
Source: http://newindianexpress.com/cities/chennai/Slowdown-in-air-cargo-hits-trade-badly/2013/07/26/article1702540.ece

Thursday, July 25, 2013


A Superport is in the prcess of creation  in the North West. Liza Helps investigates.
Work has started on Peel Ports’ £300 million in-river deep sea container port Liverpool 2 – an integral part of the puzzle that makes up the ambitious multi billion pound Liverpool Superport in the North West, but can port centric development really work in the region?

It doesn’t seem possible driving along the ramshackle pot hole-laden road to Peel Ports’ Port of Liverpool headquarters on an unseasonably wintry day close to Easter. But Global Institute of Logistics chief executive officer Kieran Ring is of a more optimistic frame of mind. Talking at the CILT Conference on Logistics Clustering he says the plans have potential: “As fuel costs rise the need to move goods, domestically and internationally, far more efficiently becomes much more important than ever, both from an economic and an environmental viewpoint.”

Mark Basnett, executive director of Liverpool City Region LEP, a key partner in the development of the Superport agrees: “The trends of increased imports of consumer goods from low cost economies and export back to those economies, increased road transport costs and increased focus on more sustainable logistics for retailers and manufacturers, will drive business towards port centric and multi-modal logistics solutions close to large centres of population.”

Ring adds that when companies locate in the same place and share opportunities, synergies are created that can provide more efficient supply chain solutions than if the same companies were to work alone.

He points out that with globalisation the need for clustering at ports becomes paramount as more and more goods are imported around the globe. “The nearer you are to the port the better chance you have of keeping costs low.”

It is just that point that Stephen Carr, head of business development at Peel Ports Mersey (which operates Port of Liverpool and the Manchester Ship Canal) is keen to reiterate: “Currently 90 per cent of deep sea cargo enters the UK from the south, yet over 50 per cent of the UK container market is based in Birmingham northwards. Indeed 70 per cent of all goods that come within a 150 mile radius of the Port of Liverpool enter the UK via southern ports – with the on-going journey to the North of England by road and rail adding extra strain on the country's overburdened transport networks and the environmental impact of unnecessary CO2 emissions.”

Richard Butcher chief executive officer of Stobart Estates agrees and notes: “The majority of containers spend most of their lives empty but someone, somewhere is paying for that – there are about a million empty containers a year being moved out of the North West to the Southern Ports at a cost of £400 per container: that’s £400 million of waste. Any cuts to that cost must be welcomed.”

Carr goes on: "Liverpool is the most centrally positioned deep-sea port in the UK, meaning it is ideally situated to serve all cargo bound for Northern Britain by optimising the supply chain.
"By looking at the integrated ‘Ship-to-Door’ logistics, we not only optimise the transport leg from port to store, but also offer an efficient onward transport journey as Liverpool is closest to the consumer.”

According to the Liverpool LEP 17 million people live within two hours’ drive of Liverpool making it the largest population centre outside London.

Razi Khan, a buyer and supply chain manager at Typhoo, imports tea to the UK from around the globe. He says that by using the Port of Liverpool, as opposed to the southern UK ports, Typhoo has been able to make substantial cost savings and meet its targets for reducing carbon emissions.

Khan says: “We save around £500/40ft by bringing our cargo into the UK through Liverpool, including customs and storage. In 2010 we imported just 20 per cent of our tea through Liverpool. We currently have around 60 per cent coming through the port, and our target is to have 100 per cent entering the UK market through the Port of Liverpool within the next five years.”

Historically, Typhoo Tea routed 95 per cent of its cargo through southern UK ports and then road hauled to the North West. By importing through the Port of Liverpool they have significantly reduced road miles and therefore their carbon emissions as well as saved money. Peel Ports’ Liverpool 2 scheme is part of a wider £2 billion investment in the region which will see a transformation of the way logistics is carried out in the country or so its proponents boast.

Carr says: “There has already been an incremental growth in market share in 2009 to 2012 Liverpool had a one per cent market share – equivalent of 40-50,000 containers or 70,000 TEUs. Although the terminal at Liverpool 2 will open in 2015, it won't be up to full run rate capacity until 2020/21 but in that seven years it is expected to ramp up and broadly double the throughput of the port.

“But, it is not just the increase in market share. Peel Ports estimates show that by 2030 container traffic through the Port of Liverpool could experience a modal shift away from road haulage with five per cent of freight being taken by rail, ten per cent via the Manchester Ship Canal and 15 per cent by coastal shipping.”

In 2012 the figures were less than one per cent by rail, five per cent by Manchester Ship Canal and just 2.5 per cent by coastal shipping.

Construction work on Peel Ports’ Liverpool 2 project will create a 16.5 metre berthing pocket allowing two vessels of up to 13,500 TEU at a time to call directly at the port when it becomes operational in 2015.

The scheme will see the construction of an 854-metre quay wall and the creation of 44 acres of land for the container terminal which will be served by ship to shore quay cranes and modern cantilever rail mounted gantry cranes (CRMGs). It will be one of the UK’s most modern container terminals.

Douglas Coleman, programme director for the Liverpool 2 project, explains: “CRMGs are a highly-efficient use of space. We have given this great thought, and the adoption of CRMG technology also means that ships are going to be serviced very quickly. They are more modern than our current straddle carrier operation, and are a high-technology solution. This will be one of the UK’s most modern container terminals, and that includes the crane technology.”

The sheer scale of the Liverpool 2 project can be shown by the quantities of materials which are needed in the construction phase – with the quay wall requiring 30,000 cubic metres of concrete, 15,000 metres of steel piles and 6100 metres of new crane rails. Dredging of the berthing pocket will remove around one million cubic metres of material from the Mersey; and almost three million cubic metres of infill material will be required to create the new container area.

Associated infrastructure will require the construction of 3,500 metres of new road, 230,000 sq metres of surfacing and 2500 metres of fencing.

Liverpool 2 is the key project in the Mersey Ports Masterplan, the 20-year vision for growth and future developments at the Port of Liverpool and on the Manchester Ship Canal – launched by Peel Ports in 2010.

Liverpool 2 will connect directly to a number of port centric logistics hubs along the Manchester Ship Canal via barge – resulting in the development of the UK's first "green logistics hub" which will reduce costs, congestion and carbon footprint for businesses located in the North West of England, serving the North of the UK.

However, the £2 billion Superport project is not just about Liverpool 2 and the Manchester Ship Canal. Overall the project brings together 3MG (Mersey Multi-Modal Gateway), Port of Liverpool and Liverpool John Lennon Airport as well as Liverpool 2 and the Manchester Ship Canal.

Analysts Amion Consulting have forecast the potential for more than 21,000 new jobs and an additional £6.1 billion GVA (gross value added – a measure of economic output) by 2020, then nearly 30,000 jobs and another £18.3 billion of GVA by 2030.

But why has this all come about now? Much of it is about the economy and the government’s attempts to get it moving. This includes the mass injection of cash to pump prime infrastructure works throughout the country and the revision of the planning process.

 Butcher says: “The regeneration of brownfield sites has been helped by the revision of the planning process. When you look at the North West, land is cheaper than Midlands and the South - land costs, ownership and rents. Then, as you extrapolate, rates are lower. In addition labour rates are lower too.
Total package
“You have got to look at the total logistics package it is not just about the rental cost of the buildings – they are not the be all and end all of the deal. You have to put everything in the mix. The Golden Triangle may look good but you have got to look at how to service your market. The companies that win will be able to combine their business (online and traditional) with the lowest possible distribution cost.”

As well as the basic economics another reason why things are moving in the North West today has to be that for the first time in their history the Manchester Ship Canal and the Port of Liverpool are owned by the one company – Peel Ports.

“Up until recently,” says Stephen Carr, head of business development at Peel Ports, “the two entities were in competition with each other. Originally the Manchester Ship Canal was built by the traders of Manchester to bypass Liverpool and when one built something the other would try to outmatch it – it was a war so to speak.”

"We can now synergise them. That enables us now to hopefully punch our weight."

The canal is proving extremely popular with customers and Peel has had to invest in a larger ship just to keep up with demand. The new ship, MV Coastal Deniz, can carry 260 containers – 60 per cent more than its previous vessel Monica.

Stephen Carr says: “Deniz will move 20,000 containers in 2013. In 2009 we handled 3,000 containers, in 2011 this rose to 10,000 containers and in 2012 it carried 15,000 containers.
“Seven million tonnes of dry bulk cargo and petrol chemicals are also shipped annually.”


Rail links- Rail is key to multi-modal gateway
The rail terminal is key to Stobart Estates’ 1.4 million sq ft Stobart Park at 3MG in Widnes says Stobart Estates’ chief executive Richard Butcher.

“Many developers say they have rail connectivity, either possibly or in the future, but at Stobart Park it is alive and kicking with at present seven freight trains a day and a capacity to more than double that.”

Indeed it is a very slick operation directly linked to the West Coast Main Line handling up to 1,100 vehicles a day with a turnaround time of just 12 minutes.

It has the capacity to securely store 6,000 containers which are shifted around using four rail mounted cranes with automated container positional and recovery system and an advanced GPS and tracking system.

It looks mightily impressive and indeed it impressed Tesco so much so that they increased their presence on the park from an initial 628,000 sq ft to more than 770,000 sq ft.  Stobart Estates secured detailed planning for a 1 million sq ft warehouse with 40m eaves on the second phase of the development which is available on a build-to-suit basis through letting agents Jones Lang LaSalle and Cushman & Wakefield.

As an added incentive to prospective tenants on the site Stobart is also pushing ahead with a 20Mw biomass plant run on recycled wood.

“To get an idea of the power that it can produce,” says Butcher, “Tesco’s current electric needs at the park for its chilled store requires just 2.5Mw a year so there is more than enough power to supply potential occupier enquiries.”

Stobart calculates the potential savings at 35p per sq ft per year by having this green energy supply based on a one million sq ft ambient building that equates to £350,000 a year or £7 million saving in running costs on a 20 year lease.

The park is part of a larger development in conjunction with Halton Council known as the Mersey Multi Modal Gateway (3MG) that could see the development of up to 3.5 million sq ft of warehousing, 5,000 new jobs and the reclamation of 200 acres of contaminated land.

Earlier this year, Mersey Gateway was identified as one of the UK government’s Top 40 priority projects in the National Infrastructure Plan and it has been recognised by KPMG as one of the Top 100 infrastructure projects around the globe. 

Its centrepiece is a new six-lane toll bridge over the River Mersey linking Widnes to Runcorn.

Waterways- Cereal link via the canal
Kellogg’s has increased the volume of breakfast cereals it transports using Peel Ports' “Green highway network” – on the Manchester Ship Canal container shuttle service.

The Ship Canal shuttle service is considered one of the most environmentally-friendly bulk logistics solution on offer in the UK, and already serves other major retail names such as Princes Foods, Kingsland Wine, Tesco, Typhoo, and Regatta.

Approximately 2,500 TEU of Kellogg’s cereal product will be transported via the ship canal between the company's Manchester, Ireland and Iberia distribution hubs in 2013. The containerised product is transhipped at the Port of Liverpool on to a coastal feeder service to serve the Irish and Spanish markets.

In what is an added value logistics solution for the company, Kellogg’s has also taken advantage of the Port of Liverpool's flexible 'on demand' warehousing offering. The port-centric warehousing capacity further increases efficiency of the company's supply chain, with storage for up to 7,000 pallets of cereal product available at the Port of Liverpool when required.

Paul Blears, UK and Republic of Ireland export freight operations manager of Kellogg’s in Manchester, explains: “In general, many of our customers don’t hold stocks of cornflakes, so next day delivery is important, making the Manchester Ship Canal of little interest to us. But this has changed. Already, we have one customer in Dublin (Tesco) which requires between four and five 45ft HC’s a week, which wants us to use the environmentally friendly waterway.

“We were hesitant at first, but since trying the waterway, we have been very impressed with its reliability. There have been no nasty surprises. Truck deliveries to/from Irlam are very quick, and transit times are respected.”

Kellogg's use of the shuttle service will equate to an 85 per cent reduction in road miles for the supply chain: a reduction of 40,000 road miles and 61 tonnes of CO2 in the coming year.

Paul McCoy, business development manager for Containers and Barge at Peel Ports said: "We have developed a strong relationship with Kellogg’s and have a comprehensive understanding of their logistics needs and aspirations.

“Peel Ports is developing a series of mini ports and multi-modal logistics hubs at various locations along the Manchester Ship Canal, which means we can bring containerised products inland to exactly where the customer wants it.”

Source: http://www.logisticsmanager.com/Articles/20441/The+mother+of+all+ports.html

Birmingham-based Guardfreight International has signed a deal with the Midlands Assembly Network (MAN) to bring a new locking mechanism to market, which hopes to prevent $80 billion (£52.5 bn) of cargo going missing every year.
The E-Containerlock will be fitted to shipping containers to provide location updates as well as immediate alerts if entry is forced, thanks to an in-built GRPS tracking system.

Guardfreight says it is ideal for preventing theft of goods and for insurance purposes, as you can prove the exact location of a tampering or break-in.

Designed by industry expert Andrew Harrison, a working prototype of the product has already been developed, a small batch of which is now to be trialled by worldwide freight monitoring agencies.

Harrison said: “It’s early days, but we’re confident that this solution will change the way cargo is transported, with our business plan showing a £16m turnover by 2018 and the possibility of creating up to 50 jobs directly and in the supply chain.”

shipntrak, a subscription free online freight exchange, has been launched at the Logistics Link Live exhibition in Birmingham.
The system, which uses smartphones to track shipments, has been designed for simplicity and is powered by global vehicle tracking company Simplytrak,
It connects shippers and hauliers on a subscription-free auction style platform and enables subscribers to match cargo with available space. It allows live tracking of the cargo from pick up to delivery, which the company reckons is a first for online freight exchange systems.
Users pay a transaction charge of 7.5 per cent of the agreed price.

Carriers can put details of vehicles on the system and relevant loads can be matched with suitable vehicles based on location, route and transport conditions.

shipntrak can be used without any additional tracking hardware fitted to vehicles.  Installation of the shipntrak app on any GPS enabled android/iOS device enables shippers to track their loads in real time and assists hauliers in vehicle management as well as providing an accurate delivery time to the receiver. 
The system alerts the shipper 15 minutes before the collection is due - the shipper can then track the progress of the delivery in real time.
The process has been designed to be self policing with both shippers and carriers rating each other in the same way as ebay buyers and sellers,
Ehab Allam, managing director of shipntrak said: "We are delighted that shipntrak is now live and are looking forward to introducing the system to the logistics community."

Source: http://www.logisticsmanager.com/Articles/20633/Subs-free+freight+exchange+launched+at+Logistics+Link.html
Track your Ocean Cargo by Container or BL (Bill Of Lading) - Number.
Click on the links below to visit the tracking and tracing of the various carriers
:


Ignazio Messina Line
INTERASIA Lines (BL Tracking)
Italia Marittima (formerly Lloyd Triestino)
Container Information
CARU - CARU, LCRU containers
CRONOS - CRSU containers
UES - UESU, GVDU containers
TAL - TRLU, ICSG, TCLU containers
TEXTAINER - TEXU, TGHU containers 

Taipei, July 24 (CNA) China Airlines (CAL), Taiwan's largest carrier, said Wednesday that it will launch temperature-controlled air freight services later this year to meet logistical needs, primarily in the healthcare industry.

Through a joint campaign with Envirotainer, a Sweden-based company that supplies cold-chain management of pharmaceuticals and biotech products, CAL said it could elevate its international competitiveness by offering more diverse air cargo services.

CAL said it will participate in an Envirotainer training program on handling of all types of temperature-controlled containers and further integrate resources from SkyTeam Cargo, the world's only international air cargo alliance, which the airline joined in 2012.

The company said it will target eight airports -- Taiwan Taoyuan, Amsterdam Schipol, Frankfurt, San Francisco, Tokyo Narita, Osaka, Los Angeles and Singapore -- for its temperature-controlled air freight business in the initial phase.

CAL is well-positioned to offer cargo transfer services through air transport hubs worldwide, it said.

According to the International Air Transport Association, the carrier had the ninth-highest international air cargo volume in 2012.

Besides the temperature-controlled air freight services, CAL said it will expand its high-margin shipping product line under SkyTeam Cargo's Equation and Equation Heavy express services.

Source: http://focustaiwan.tw/news/aeco/201307240020.aspx

Saudi Airlines Cargo has grown belly cargo by almost one-third during the first half of the year.

In the period from January to June 2013, Saudia Cargo moved 270,000 tonnes of cargo, breaking last year’s record of 250,000 and achieving a 6 percent revenue increase and 4 percent tonnage increase. Belly cargo grew by 29 percent, with the main contributors being the U.S. (+50 percent) and the UK (+40 percent), while cargo in the freighter network grew by 3 percent.

The airline’s growth is the result of a number of factors. During the first half of the year, the carrier increased its freighter capacity from Dhaka, Bangladesh and commenced B747 freighter flights in Mumbai and Kano, Nigeria. It also started operations with its first B747-8F in June, which is scheduled on Riyadh, Saudi Arabia-Hong Kong-Riyadh-Frankfurt-Saudi Arabia flight rotations.

In terms of charter activity, revenues were lower than anticipated in the first six months due to a shortage of aircraft availability. But as of July, the airline increased its fleet to 15 aircraft (4 MD11s and 11 747s), three of which are dedicated to the growing ad hoc charter market.

“Although the current market is a bit soft, we still expect to achieve a 10 percent growth during the second half of the year,” Nabil Khojah, CEO of Saudia Cargo, said. “This is principally due to the boost in our charter activity, optimization of our freighter network, adjustments to freighter schedules and increases in the number of freighters to some of our key destinations.”

This entry was posted in Air Cargo World News and tagged air, airfreight, cargo, freight, nabil khojah, saudi airlines, saudia.
Source: http://www.aircargoworld.com/Air-Cargo-News/2013/07/saudia-cargo-breaks-last-years-cargo-record/2414619#sthash.8f863hcK.dpuf

Prolonged weakness continues in June for the Asia Pacific air cargo markets, according to preliminary traffic figures from the Association of Asia Pacific Airlines.

Asia Pacific airlines carried more international passengers, but international air cargo demand, expressed in freight tonne kilometers, was 2.2 percent lower year over year, reflecting continued weakness in key export markets.

Offered freight capacity increased marginally, by 0.3 percent, leading to a 1.7 percentage point fall in the average international air cargo load factor to 66.2 percent.

“Demand for air travel remains relatively robust, maintaining the established growth trend, and still outpacing expectations of more moderate growth in the wider economy. Air cargo markets, however, remain depressed, with Asian airlines reporting a 2.4 percent decline in freight traffic for the first six months of the year, reflecting persistent weakness in global trade conditions,” Andrew Herdman, AAPA director general said. “Prospects for the second half of the year remain challenging, given the underlying uncertainty over the global economic outlook, but Asian airlines are still confident about future growth prospects and are continuing to invest in further route development and customer service initiatives.”

This entry was posted in Air Cargo World News and tagged aapa, air, airfreight, andrew herdman, asia, association of asia pacific airlines, cargo, freight, pacific.
Source: http://www.aircargoworld.com/Air-Cargo-News/2013/07/weakness-continues-for-asia-pacific-cargo-markets/2414616#sthash.GZZRNUlG.dpuf

New containers will resist fires of up to 1,200 degrees for up to 4 hours

UPS plans to add fire-resistant air cargo containers to its fleet by next year, the delivery company announced this week as officials blamed the fatal crash of a UPS plane three years ago on a shipment of hundreds of lithium batteries that caught fire.

The battery fire moved quickly inside the plane and set off a “catastrophic” chain reaction of flames and smoke that filled the cockpit, bringing the Boeing 747 down in the desert outside Dubai, according to a report released Wednesday by United Arab Emirates officials.

UPS, which has its main air hub and airline headquarters in Louisville, said it ordered 1,821 of the new shipping containers, which are built of fiber-reinforced plastic similar to ballistic body armor. Delivery of the new containers will begin in September and is expected to be completed by early 2014 and the company will replace existing containers as they wear out with the new ones.

UPS spokesman Malcolm Berkley said the new containers will resist fires of up to 1,200 degrees Fahrenheit for up to four hours.

Brian Gaudet, spokesman for Independent Pilots Association, the union representing UPS pilots, said the fire-resistant containers need to undergo additional testing and that a foam spray currently being tested is necessary for the cargo containers to function adequately.

Berkley said the Federal Aviation Administration and National Transportation Safety board have not yet certified the foam spray. Calls to the FAA and NTSB seeking comment were not returned.

“We have tested these containers in the laboratory and in live operations,” UPS Airlines President Mitch Nichols said in a statement. “They will enhance safety and increase durability,” he said, adding that the lighter containers would be more fuel efficient.

The 322-page investigation into the crash, which killed both pilots including Capt. Doug Lampe of Prospect, backed up preliminary probes pointing to the lithium batteries as the possible cause of the blaze and drew further attention to the potential risks of the batteries in aviation.

Source: http://www.courier-journal.com/article/20130724/BUSINESS/307240063/UPS-buying-fire-resistant-cargo-containers-after-Dubai-crash-linked-lithium-batteries?nclick_check=1

The Vice President and Minister of Women’s Affairs, Dr. Isatou Njie-Saidy yesterday, Tuesday 23 July, deputizing for the Gambian leader, laid the foundation stone for the new project of Trade Facilitation Through Increased Logistics Infrastructure and Services worth US$ 3 million dollars at Banjul International Airport. The Vice President reading the statement of the President told participants that the project is a significant milestone on the development of the country. “I am happy to note that the project we are launching today will include the construction of a cargo complex with modern equipment at this airport.

The project includes a civil works component for a warehouse that will be furnished with cold storage and other facilities to handle air cargo. I take note of the component that will build human capacity by training staff of the Gambia International Airlines,” said President Jammeh. The Gambian leader told participants that the project was hatched through the Enhanced Integrated Framework (EIF) Tier 2 which seeks to increase participation in international trade thereby improving livelihoods in tourism, horticulture and fisheries export sub-sector.

These sectors, which he said, are among the main sources of employment and income for women command high priorities in his development agenda as enshrined in Vision 2020. He complains about the underutilized potentials of the fisheries and horticulture sub-sectors due to the lack of adequate storage and distribution system. President Jammeh urged Gambians to take ownership of national institutions rather than unduly depending on expatriate labour. The training to be provided, he said, includes sanitary and phytosanitary services, expertise that has been lacking in the country’s international trade systems.
He said he has been informed that the project would enable the Banjul International Airport to enhance its safety and security standards in handling cargo through the provision of more scanners among other facilities. The vice president pointed out that with these improvements, the number of airlines serving, and accepting cargo from The Gambia, would increase.
“The $2.4 million grant from EIF’s Tier 2 that will finance this project will enable the GIA to charge competitive rates for air cargo. Therefore, we anticipate an increase in the number of small holder exporters that will have access to competitive new airport infrastructure and services.
With these new facilities, The Gambia’s image will be further enhanced, positioning the country as an attractive freight cargo entrepot in the sub-region thereby boosting our potential for economic growth especially in the area of exports,” he said.
The Gambian leader indicated that the oversight responsibility for the implementation of the project rests on the Ministry of Trade. However, he said the GIA would be the implementing Agency and the private sector would be the beneficiaries. He calls for the need for proper handling and regular maintenance of the facilities. Hon. Abdou Kolley, Minister of Trade asserted that the project would remove obstacles by facilitating trade for the country. Among other things, he said the new cargo complex is expected to boost the status of the airport in contributing to the livelihood of horticulture and tourism.
He commended the Gambia International Airlines (GIA) for coming with such laudable initiative. However, Ms Naffie Barry, Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Trade/ EIF Focal Point also highlighted the logistics involved in initiating the project while Ms. Dorothy Tembo, Executive Director of the (EIF) Executive Secretariat at the World Trade Organisation reaffirmed the intentions of her organization to work with the Gambia Government.
She spoke on the need for additional efforts for the facilitation of trade in the country’s economic growth. She emphasized the commitments of her institution for trade related assistance for Least Developed Countries (LDCs).

Meanwhile, the remarks made by Mr. Abdoulie E. Jammeh, Director General of the Gambia Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA) and Mr. Bakary Nyassi, Managing Director of (GIA) both hailed the project as a milestone on the development of the Banjul International Airport. They said the project would boost the confidence of the international airways to the GIA. They also said apart from revenue earning, it would also boost its pride among international competitors.

Source: http://foroyaa.gm/burning-issues/13801-us-3-million-new-cargo-complex-launched
KUALA LUMPUR - Preliminary traffic figures for the month of June released today by the Association of Asia Pacific Airlines (AAPA) showed sustained growth in international passenger traffic, but prolonged weakness in air cargo markets.
 Asia Pacific airlines carried a combined total of 18.3 million international passengers in June, a 7.1% growth compared to the same month last year. International passenger traffic, in revenue passenger kilometre (RPK) terms, grew by 5.7% whilst available seat capacity expanded by 6.4%, resulting in a modest 0.5 percentage point fall in the average international passenger load factor to 79.6% for the month. 

International air cargo demand, expressed in freight tonne kilometre (FTK) terms, was 2.2% lower in June compared to the same month last year, reflecting continued weakness in key export markets. Offered freight capacity increased marginally, by 0.3%, leading to a 1.7 percentage point fall in the average international air cargo load factor to 66.2%. 

Commenting on the results, Mr. Andrew Herdman, AAPA Director General said, "During the first half of the year, Asia Pacific airlines carried a total of 107 million international passengers, a 5.6% increase compared to the same period last year. Demand for air travel remains relatively robust, maintaining the established growth trend, and still outpacing expectations of more moderate growth in the wider economy. Air cargo markets, however, remain depressed, with Asian airlines reporting a 2.4% decline in freight traffic for the first six months of the year, reflecting persistent weakness in global trade conditions."

 Mr Herdman warned however that "prospects for the second half of the year remain challenging, given the underlying uncertainty over the global economic outlook, but Asian airlines are still confident about future growth prospects and are continuing to invest in further route development and customer service initiatives."

Source: http://www.traveldailynews.asia/news/article/52962/asia-pacific-airlines-announce-their
New York-based business search engine Reportlinker.com said it has released a new market research report focused on the world air cargo and freight logistics market 2013-2023.

According to the report, the market is currently in a state of flux, with shifting results since the 2008 financial crash. Investor confidence has been hit, hard, by a series of forecast upswings which failed to materialise in any sustainable sense. 

Rampant fuel price rises remain the single largest factor in the forecast, bringing carrier capacities into sharper focus and asking questions as to the cost-effectiveness of air cargo deliveries. 

The global macroeconomic climate is also a major issue, with the ongoing drag of the euro zone a major problem, while the immaturity of the South American market has created problems in the industry. 

Volatility is expected to diminish, but remains a factor of concern. Nevertheless, the report assesses that the air cargo and freight logistics market will be worth USD 103.17bn in 2013.

Bright spots remain, with air cargo a fundamental requirement for many industries, and consumer spending still growing in developed and developing markets. 

The expansion of regional hubs in the Asia-Pacific are expected to act to provide additional stability to the market and the lack of alternate modes of transport (the APAC region is divided by sea, South America and Africa by mountains and distance) ensure that developing regions will still find air cargo to be a key factor.

Source: www.reportlinker.com.

Reeling from fines for their part in a global cartel, airlines are finding it tougher to make a dollar from the freight market as their margins are squeezed.

Cathay Pacific chief executive John Slosar does not mince his words when he talks about the airline industry's version of the canary in the coalmine.
''I think the canary probably passed away a long time ago, mate. We are looking for a new one at the moment,'' Slosar laughed on the sidelines of a recent airline conference in Cape Town.
Mr Slosar might be a raconteur but his remarks about the air-cargo market underline the challenges facing airlines trying to earn a dollar from a part of the industry known for its wafer-thin margins.
While passenger travel worldwide is growing about 5 per cent a year, it is a different story for the air-cargo market. It has shrunk since peaking in 2010, and for the past year cargo volumes have been flat with no sign of an upturn.
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''Not only is the [air-cargo] market weak but freighter utilisation continues to fall,'' International Air Transport Association chief economist Brian Pearce said. ''Load factors have stabilised but at low levels. This makes it very difficult for airlines to generate profits from their cargo businesses.''
The air-cargo industry is just emerging from a dark chapter in its history - the busting of a global air-cargo cartel last decade. So far, 13 airlines, including Qantas, Emirates, Singapore Airlines and Cathay, have been fined almost $100 million in Australia for their part in the rigging of rates on international routes.
That episode might be drawing to a close, but the air-cargo industry remains gripped by challenging trading conditions that show no sign of easing.
What is surprising about the trend is that it is occurring at the same time as online shopping has created a boom in parcel freight. And some dedicated air-cargo operators are reaping the rewards.
Several years ago, global logistics group DHL Express was hiring significant amounts of belly space on commercial jetliners to ferry freight to Australia. Now, DHL has its own Boeing 767 freighter planes flying five times a week between Sydney and Tokyo - its main hub for freight from regions including Europe and the US - largely due to the boom in parcels.
''Online retail has surged. It is growing at 20 per cent a month and it is just not stopping,'' senior vice-president of DHL Express Oceania Gary Edstein said.
While it is a mini-boom for companies such as DHL, commercial airlines are not feeling the effects.
Mr Edstein believes the freight market is flat for airlines partly because air-cargo companies such as DHL are not using the belly space of commercial jetliners nearly as much to carry their goods. ''We are taking freight off their bellies,'' he said. ''It comes down to us wanting more control. We want to operate our own network … [so] we are not dependent on passenger flights.''
Industry insiders say the weak freight market is also due to airlines increasing capacity on routes worldwide. Put simply, a surge in flights creates even more space for cargo.
Deutsche Bank analysts say the air-cargo market, particularly on major export lanes in Asia, is weak and they expect a further increase in capacity as more supply becomes available.
Airlines are set to expand their fleets of large aircraft, which will ''add more belly capacity in an already oversupplied airport-to-airport airfreight market''.
''We believe the near-term airfreight outlook is bleak, given the wide-body passenger airline capacity additions, and we would not be surprised if airlines accept low airfreight rates to fill any unused belly capacity,'' the analysts said.
It is forcing some airlines to park planes. Last month, Singapore Airlines' cargo division grounded a Boeing 747-400 freighter aircraft due to a ''continuing capacity surplus''. The jumbo will be in storage until next May at Victorville, the world's largest aircraft parking yard at the south-western edge of the Mojave Desert in California. It is the second freighter aircraft the airline has put in temporary storage in the past eight months.
Airlines' ability to make a profit is not helped by stubbornly high fuel prices. Jet fuel prices in Singapore have been trading in a band between $US110 ($121) and $US140 a barrel since December.
Both Singapore Airlines and Cathay Pacific have a large exposure to the freight market. Earlier this year, Cathay announced plans to buy three new Boeing 747-800 freighters, which have a list price of about $US1 billion. The purchase will boost Cathay's fleet of Boeing 747-800 freighters to 13.
Qantas is less reliant on freight than its regional peers. Its freight division has five planes, including a Boeing 767 used on the trans-Tasman route, and several 737s.
Qantas carries 5 per cent of the total airfreight between China and the US. Its freight division booked a pre-tax profit of $22 million in the first half of the financial year, down from $38 million previously, which was blamed on a weak domestic market and strong competition. But the international operations of the freight business were said to be strong in the first half.
Qantas executives agree the air-cargo market is weak, particularly in Europe. But the company is quick to point out that it does not have a large direct exposure to the European freight market. The airline's main focus is the US-Australia and China-US trade routes, which have been more robust.
Cargo does tend to track the world economy, and in some people's minds precedes it.
''Cargo is still, frankly, in the doldrums. We are now into our probably third year of month-on-month declines,'' Mr Slosar said. ''Cargo always responds to the world economy, generally, so that somehow suggests the world economy is not firing on all cylinders.''
Airlines worldwide are expected to post a higher combined profit of $US12.7 billion in 2013. But is the weakness in the air-cargo market that is holding many back.
The reporter travelled to Cape Town courtesy of IATA.

Source: http://www.smh.com.au/business/aircargo-profits-take-a-dive-in-flat-belly-landing-20130709-2po9c.html#ixzz2a3ULIpRm