(04 Nov 2021)
IATA's September 2021 data for global air cargo
markets shows that demand continued to be well above pre-crisis
levels and that capacity constraints persist.
Global demand, measured in cargo tonne-kilometres
(CTKs/FTKs), was up 9.1% compared to September 2019 (9.4% for
international operations). Capacity remains constrained at 8.9%
below pre-COVID19 levels (-12% for international operations).
Several factors impacting global air cargo demand
should be noted:
- Supply chain disruptions and the resulting
delivery delays have led to long supplier delivery times. This
typically means manufacturers use air transport, which is quicker,
to recover time lost during the production process. The September
global Supplier Delivery Time Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) was
at 36, values below 50 are favorable for air cargo.
- The September new export orders component and
manufacturing output component of the PMIs have deteriorated from
levels in previous month but remain in favorable territory.
Manufacturing activity continued to expand at a global level but,
there was contraction in emerging economies.
- The inventory-to-sales ratio remains low ahead
of the peak year-end retail events such as Single’s Day, Black
Friday and Cyber Monday. This is positive for air cargo, however
further capacity constraints put this at risk.
- The cost-competitiveness of air cargo relative
to that of container shipping remains favorable. Pre-crisis, the
average price to move air cargo was 12.5 times more expensive than
sea shipping. In September 2021 it was only three times more
expensive.
“Air cargo demand grew 9.1% in September compared
to pre-COVID levels,” said Willie Walsh, IATA’s Director General.
“There is a benefit from supply chain congestion as manufacturers
turn to air transport for speed. But severe capacity constraints
continue to limit the ability of air cargo to absorb extra demand.
If not addressed, bottlenecks in the supply chain will slow the
economic recovery from COVID19. Governments must act to relieve
pressure on global supply chains and improve their overall
resilience.”
To relieve supply chain disruptions, including
those highlighted by the US on supply chain resilience on the
sidelines of last weekend’s G20 Summit, IATA is calling on
governments to:
- Ensure that air crew operations are not hindered
by COVID19 restrictions designed for air travelers;
- Implement the commitments governments made at
the ICAO High Level Conference on COVID19 to restore international
connectivity. This will ramp-up vital cargo capacity with “belly”
space; and
- Provide innovative policy incentives to address
labor shortages where they exist.
Regional Air Cargo Performance
- September 2021
Asia-Pacific airlines saw their international air
cargo volumes increase 4.5% in September 2021 compared to the same
month in 2019. This was a slowdown in demand compared to the
previous month’s 5.1% expansion. Demand is being affected by
slowing manufacturing activity in China. International capacity is
significantly constrained in the region, down 18.2% vs. September
2019. Looking forward, the decision by some countries in the
region to lift travel restrictions should provide a boost for
capacity.
North American carriers posted a 19.3% increase in
international cargo volumes in September 2021 compared to
September 2019. New export orders and demand for faster shipping
times are underpinning the North American performance.
International capacity was down 4.0% compared to September 2019, a
slight improvement from the previous month.
European carriers saw a 5.3% increase in
international cargo volumes in September 2021 compared to the same
month in 2019. This was on a par with August’s performance (5.6%).
Demand was strongest on the large North Atlantic trade lane (up
6.9% vs September 2019). Performance on other routes was weaker.
Manufacturing activity, orders and long supplier delivery times
remain favorable to air cargo demand. International capacity was
down 13.5% on September 2019.
Middle Eastern carriers experienced a 17.6% rise
in international cargo volumes in September 2021 versus September
2019, an improvement compared to the previous month (14.7%).
International capacity was down 4% compared to September 2019.
Latin American carriers reported a decline of
17.1% in international cargo volumes in September compared to the
2019 period, which was the weakest performance of all regions.
This was also slightly worse than the previous month (a 14.5%
fall). Capacity in September was down 20.9% on pre-crisis levels,
an improvement from August, which was down 24.2% on the same month
in 2019.
African airlines’ saw international cargo volumes
increase by 34.6% in September, the largest increase of all
regions for the ninth consecutive month. Seasonally adjusted
volumes are now 20% above pre-crisis 2019 levels but have been
trending sideways for the past six months. International capacity
was 6.9% higher than pre-crisis levels, the only region in
positive territory, albeit on small volumes.
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