Air Cargo Decline May Now Have Hit Its Floor

International Air Transportation Association (IATA) March data offers hope that air freight demand may have stabilized.

While passenger traffic continues to decline, air cargo demand has steadied this month and though figures show a “shockingly low level of minus 21.4%,” says Giovanni Bisignani, IATA’s director general and CEO. “It’s not the end of the recession, but we may have found the floor.”

The association feels the decline in air freight has been driven, in part, as manufacturers have large inventories that built up late last year. IATA claims that stabilization of inventory to sales ratios has helped stabilize air freight demand. Reduction in inventory can only come as consumer demand rises. The association has predicted loss for 2009 to total $4.7 billion for all air lines.

By region, decline in cargo demand through the first quarter of the year has been -27.4% in Africa, -25.9% in Asia/Pacific, -22.0% in Europe, -19.3% in Latin America, -6.2% in the Middle East and -24.4% in North America. The industry as a whole was down 22.8%.

Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2012 Penton Media Inc.

Feature Article

2012 Top 10 Predictions for the Supply Chain in 2012



2012 will see the consumer take a more prominent role in directing the course of supply chain management, as volatile demand has become the new norm.

More Feature Articles


More Web Exclusive Features




MH&L Video Spotlight

Kuna Foodservice, a food distributor based in St. Louis, Mo., expanded to a 98,000 sq. ft. distribution center that includes a refrigerated receiving dock, freezer and storage area for paper and canned goods. Learn more.

Video Archive

Featured Suppliers

Browse Back Issues

January 2012

December 2011

November 2011

October 2011

September 2011

August 2011