Air cargo demand up 18.4% in January — IATA

Mar 09, 2024

In a statement this week, IATA said this significant upturn marks the highest annual growth in cargo tonne-kilometers since the summer season of 2021.

Workers work at the air cargo terminal at Entebbe International Airport in 2022. (AFP)

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GENEVA - The International Air Transport Association (IATA) released data for January 2024 global air cargo markets indicating a strong start to 2024. 

Total demand (measured in cargo tonne-kilometers) increased by 18.4% compared to January 2023 levels (19.8% for international operations). 

In a statement this week, IATA said this significant upturn marks the highest annual growth in cargo tonne-kilometers since the summer season of 2021.

Capacity (measured in available cargo tonne-kilometres) was up 14.6% compared to January 2023 (18.2% for international operations), which was largely related to the growth in belly capacity. 

International belly capacity rose 25.8% year-on-year on the strength of passenger markets.

"Air cargo demand was up 18.4% year-on-year in January. This is a strong start to the year," said IATA director general Willie Walsh.

"In particular, the booming e-commerce sector is continuing to help air cargo demand to trend above growth in both trade and production since the last quarter of 2023. 

"The counterweight to this good news is uncertainty over how China’s economic slowdown will unfold. This will be on the minds of air cargo executives meeting in Hong Kong next week for the IATA World Cargo Symposium with an agenda focused on digitalization, efficiency, and sustainability."

Air cargo growth outpaced trade and production, with several factors in the operating environment deserving note:

▪️ Global cross-border trade increased by 1.0% in December compared to the previous month (-0.2% YoY).

▪️ In January, the manufacturing output Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) improved to 50.3, surpassing the 50 mark for the first time in eight months, indicating expansion. The new export orders PMI also saw an increase to 48.8, but remains below the critical 50 threshold, suggesting a continuing yet decelerating decline in global exports.

▪️ Inflation in major economies continued to ease from its peak in terms of the Consumer Price Index (CPI) in January, reaching 3.1% in both the US and in the EU and 2.1% in Japan. China’s CPI, however, indicated deflation for the fourth consecutive month, raising concerns of an economic slowdown. China’s negative inflation rate of -0.8% was the lowest since the Global Financial Crisis in 2009. 

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