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FADILA KISO, Ph.D.
E-mail: kiso@bih.net.ba
ABIDIN DELJANIN, Ph.D.
E-mail: a_deljanin@hotmail.com
University of Sarajevo,
Faculty of Traffic and Communications
Zmaja od Bosne 8, 71000 Sarajevo, Bosnia&Herzegovina
Distribution Logistics
Review
Accepted: Oct. 10, 2008
Approved: June 18, 2009
F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services
291-298
AIR FREIGHT AND LOGISTICS SERVICES
ABSTRACT
Air transport industry has gradually increased its share of
global passenger and freight traffic, and this trend has acceler-
ated in the last 40 years. For the past decade, air-freight traffic
growth has outpaced air passenger traffic growth by 1-2% each
year. In the past, air-freight sector offered limited services, with
heavy reliance on several intermediaries and a significant de-
pendence on air passenger operations. The sector can now be
characterized as a sophisticated, innovative one, relying heavily
on new electronic technologies, offering a wide range of trans-
port and logistical products through dedicated specialist freight
operators. With increasing emphasis on the globalization of
trade and economic activity, air-freight growth is expected to
continue to outpace air passenger traffic growth. The air-freight
growth is expected to be greatest in the Asian markets (intra-
-Asia; North America-Asia; Europe-Asia and Australasia).
The process of physical distribution of freight has become a
highly sophisticated operation, with increasingly greater reli-
ance being placed on the use of new technology to assist in the
movement, storage, and tracking of consignments. But trans-
port is just one component in this logistics chain. In this paper,
air-freight sector is examined in terms of its structure, organiza-
tion, its role in the supply chains, the main trends in the recent
period, constraints facing the sector and the future prospects in
air-freight sector.
KEY WORDS
air freight organization, development, trends, forecast, logistics
services
1. INTRODUCTION
The correlation between the world gross domestic
product (GDP) and the world air-freight traffic forms
the basis for traffic forecasts. Because of the cyclical
nature of GDP growth, air-freight traffic growth is
also subject to cyclical effects. World air freight
growth typically outpaced GDP growth, by a factor of
more than two.
Although economic activity is the primary influ-
ence on the world air freight development, many other
factors must be considered. Those other factors that
effect the airborne freight growth rate include avail-
able capacity, freight yields, jet fuel prices, relative
current strengths regulations, national industrial ini-
tiatives, and development of other transport modes
(land and maritime competition) [7].
For example, after a strong surge of 12% annual
growth in 2004, the world air freight traffic as mea-
sured in revenue tonne-kilometers (RTK), slowed
down to just 2% growth in 2005. Much of the reduc-
tion in traffic growth in 2005 was due to the diversion
of some long-haul traffic from normal air freight chan-
nels to maritime trade lanes. As jet fuel prices rose
throughout 2005, fuel surcharges added to basic air
freight rates made air freight increasingly expensive,
prompting shippers to move their goods by other
transport modes (mostly to maritime transport for the
long-haul traffic).
2. ORGANIZATION AND STRUCTURE
OF AIR-FREIGHT SECTOR
For a number of reasons, air-freight markets are
difficult to delimit and analyze. Air freight providers
are a heterogeneous group of operators. They offer
different types and different levels of logistics services.
There are three main categories of air-freight opera-
tors:
1) Line-haul operators,
2) Integrated/courier/express operators, and
3) Niche operators.
Line-haul operators move freight from airport to
airport, and rely on freight forwarders or consolida-
tors to deal directly with customers. Line-haul opera-
tors can be:
– All-cargo operators (scheduled and non-sched-
uled), moving only freight in dedicated freighter or
cargo aircraft such as Cargolux (European Union)
or Arrow Air (USA). All-cargo operators offer rel-
atively high reliability and have the capability to
move large volumes over long distances.
– Combination passenger and cargo operators, which
use both dedicated freighter aircraft and the belly
Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298 291
F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services
holds in passenger aircraft to move freight, such as
Lufthansa (European Union) or United Airlines
(USA). For the combination carriers, cargo opera-
tions are mainly long-haul, with a large amount of
freight being interlined onto shorter haul feeder
services. High utilization of long-haul aircraft justi-
fies the purchase of new aircraft for these services.
– Passenger operators, that use the belly holds in pas-
senger aircraft. Passenger carriers tend to view
cargo as a by-product of passenger operations.
They are considered to offer the lowest prices and
the least reliable service. Passenger carriers move
cargo in the belly holds of passenger aircraft,
where it has traditionally taken second place to
passenger services. Unlike passenger services,
shippers do not have access to price information
analogous to passenger computer reservation sys-
tems (CRSs).
Freight forwarders play an important role in con-
solidating shipments for line-haulers.
Integrated/courier/express operators move con-
signments from door to door, with time-definite deliv-
ery services (e.g. UPS; Federal Express; TNT; DHL).
These integrated carriers operate multimodal net-
works, combining air services with extensive surface
transport to meet customer demands. Integrated op-
erators offer a variety of services to shippers, and sup-
plement air services with extensive ground transport
to provide time-definite delivery with continuous ship-
ment tracking and, with logistical expertise to support
just-in-time (JIT) inventory control strategies. In or-
der for integrated operators to be able to offer
door-to-door next day deliveries, they require
night-time operations. In terms of aircraft require-
ments then, they need to operate quiet and reliable
aircraft, with low utilization levels. These operators
seek to purchase a combination of new aircraft, with
high capital costs and better utilization on long-haul
segments, with less expensive renovated second-hand
aircraft for the medium-haul operations with lower
utilizations. The integrated carriers initially began of-
fering services in the small parcel/document sector,
but now typically offer a broad range of services. The
Association of integrators with purely express freight
is no longer valid. The integrators have focused their
attention on the premium high-yield traffic. Legisla-
tive changes in the USA have permitted integrated
freight forwarders to line-haul their consignments
themselves, and since 1994 interstate ground opera-
tions for all carriers have been deregulated.
Niche operators operate with specialized equip-
ment and technology, in order to meet extraordinary
requirements (e.g., Heavy lift from the Netherlands
and Challenge Air Cargo from USA). These opera-
tors attract business through their capabilities for han-
dling outside freight or special consignments, includ-
ing line-haul to locations with poor infrastructure fa-
cilities. For chartered freight and niche operators, the
discontinuous use of aircraft makes it financially pref-
erable to acquire freighter aircraft on a second-hand
basis.
Air-freight industry was dominated until the
mid-1980s by the line-haul carriers. Following deregu-
lation in this sector, which started in 1977, the inte-
grated carriers rapidly increased their market share
and most recently in international air-freight markets.
There are several important distinctions between pas-
senger demand and shipper demands for air transport
services. These distinctions place a different set of
constraints and operating conditions on carriers de-
pending on whether they are carrying cargo, passen-
gers, or both. Freight comes in a large variety of
shapes, densities, and sizes, and must be loaded onto
and off aircraft by equipment and handlers. Large
units may have to be carried in freighter-only aircraft.
The routing of cargo, including the number of stops or
transfers, is unimportant to the shipper. What is im-
portant is the lapsed time between pick-up and deliv-
ery. For passengers, however, their preference is typi-
cally for daytime, non-stop flights. Shippers’ prefer-
ences are for night-time carriage of goods, with early
morning delivery.
One of the most significant differences between
passenger and freight air transport lies in the fact that
passenger typically travel on round-trip journeys,
while cargo travels from a point of production to a
point of consummation [8]. Matching demand with in-
bound and outbound capacity is a difficult task and
can lead to different network organizations for freight
services compared with passenger services. For com-
bination carriers, this can pose difficulties, since
freight demand and passenger demand for principal
destinations may not coincide. Carriers will take ac-
count of inbound and outbound requirements in con-
sidering, and in deciding on the segments of the route
and capacity available on each of the segments.
3. AIR-FREIGHT PRICING
Air-freight services are sold and marketed in a
number of different ways. The line-haul operators sell
a relatively small proportion of their cargo space di-
rectly to their customers. The greater proportion of
their space is sold through general sales agents
(GSAs), or freight forwarders, who negotiate with the
airlines for fixed amounts of space. The agents or for-
warders then sell on the freight space to customers.
The line-haul airlines publish their cargo tariffs as
agreed at International Air Transport Association
(IATA) tariff conferences. In practice, only a small
percentage of customers pay these published tariffs,
which can be considered as an upper-band on air
292 Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298
F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services
cargo rates. As with passenger fares, discounting is
widely applied on the basis of different circumstances
[10]. In case of cargo the rates will be determined on
the basis of a number of characteristics and circum-
stances, including the following:
– volume, density and weight of shipments;
– commodity type;
– routing;
– season;
– regularity of shipments;
– imports or exports and
– priority or speed of delivery.
Consolidated shipments, aggregated by forwarders
and carried by the line-haul operators, typically travel
under a single air waybill (AWB). The freight forward-
ers offer shippers a wide range of logistical and trans-
port services and options [9].
These include collection and door-to-door delivery
of shipments, complete documentation and paper-
work for customs purposes, customs clearance, track-
ing of shipments, and control. The freight forwarders
act as wholesalers and earn their profit by maximizing
the difference between what they pay the airlines and
other carriers and what they can charge the shippers.
The integrated operators offer a variety of services
depending on:
– the weight of the consignment, and
– the speed of delivery required by the customer.
Discounting is applied to these services on the ba-
sis of volume and regularity of custom. However, be-
cause each consignment is treated as a separate piece
of freight, with an individual air waybill and customs
declaration, the integrated carriers provide and prac-
tice electronic tracking of individual shipments, and
levy charges individually.
Customs services in many jurisdictions now oper-
ate electronically, so that consignments receive clear-
ance on route to their destination airport [17]. The
customs authority can notify the operator of consign-
ments that will need to be cleared on the ground, and
this information can be forwarded to the customer via
the tracking system.
4. RECENT TRENDS IN AIR-FREIGHT
TRANSPORT
In global terms, the dominant air cargo flows are in
three main markets:
– Asia-North America,
– North America-Europe, and
– Europe-Far East.
Table 1 lists the top 20 air-freight airports in the
world in 2007. Table 1 includes the rank of each air-
port in terms of air passenger traffic, and highlights
the distinctions in network organization of combina-
tion carriers and integrated carriers.
The line - haul combination carriers tend to focus
their cargo operations on international gateway air-
ports, allowing consolidation or break-out loads to be
transferred between long-haul and short-haul ser-
vices. The gateway airport is international airport
which is the first point of arrival or the last point of de-
parture in a state for international air services.
The integrated carriers focus their operations at
cargo hubs that do not necessarily have very high vol-
umes of passenger traffic.
The “Air Cargo World List” (Table 1) of the
world’s largest cargo airports, compiled from numbers
from Airports Council International and the airports,
shows “Memphis International”, home to Federal Ex-
press (FedEx), still at No. 1 in the world.
“Hong Kong International” has remained No. 2
for international air transport, and Hong Kong is edg-
ing closer to Memphis. Hong Kong’s growth outpaced
Memphis during the last year, and again in the first
few months of 2008, putting Hong Kong in reach of
surpassing the world’s longtime top cargo airport.
At No. 5 overall, “Shanghai Pudong” has remained
the top growth market by cargo volume, with a 15.5
percent growth, reflecting the continued potential
from the world’s most populated country.
“Seoul Incheon” has remained No. 4, despite a
slowdown from its primary carrier, Korean Air, as well
as the threat posed by the Chinese airports as alterna-
tive gateways for Northeast Asia. China figures strate-
gically in Incheon’s development. Last year, transship-
ment traffic for the first time surpassed origin/destina-
tion cargo, and China accounted for a large portion of
that cargo [12].
“Anchorage International”, a transit stop for
East-West traffic, remains at No. 3 spot and all signs
point to further growth in cargo volume at this Alas-
kan gateway.
“Frankfurt” came in at No. 7, despite only posting
a 1.9 percent growth in tonnage last year. Lufthansa
and DHL Express must contend with onerous
night-time flight restrictions that allow for only 17
flights between 11 p. m. and 5 a. m., and because of
that, they move cargo to Leipzig and elsewhere.
A bright spot for airport expansion remain the
Middle East and India. At No. 13, “Dubai”, which has
become a viable gateway for cargo to Europe and
Asia and transit point for cargo from Africa, grew 11
percent in cargo volume last year. Dubai is not the
only cargo centre of note in the Middle East. Some
airports, like “Abu Dhabi” and “Sharjah”, with 22.7
percent and 16.2 percent traffic growth in 2007, re-
spectively, continue to inch up the list of the world
Top 50 cargo airports. Freight tonnage for “Mumbai”
(No. 36) and “New Delhi” (No. 42) continue to in-
Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298 293
F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services
crease by 12.1 percent and 8.7 percent in 2007, despite
an infrastructure that significantly limits long-term
growth.
A disturbing trend is the continued decline in
cargo volume at many U. S. gateways. Cargo volume at
“New York‘s John F. Kennedy” and “Newark” air-
ports declined last year 2.8 percent and 2.7 percent, re-
spectively. Cargo volume also declined at “Chicago
O’Hare”, “Oakland”, “Dallas/Ft Worth”, and many
other North American cargo airports.
Even growth at the front-running Middle East and
Asia airports, whose growth in the past led the way, is
likely to continue to taper off until the economy im-
proves and fuel costs become manageable. For now,
294 Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298
F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services
Table 1 - Air-freight tonnage for the top 20 freight airports (2007)
Cargo
Rank
Airport Country Tonnage
% change
in freight
Comments
Passenger
Rank
1 Memphis (MEM) United States 3,840,574 4.0
The main hub for edEx;also a regional passen-
ger hub for Nordwest Airlines
87
2 Hong Kong (HKG) China 3,772,673 4.5
Third cargo terminal to be finished in 2011; an
Asia hub for DHL and main hub for Cathay
Pacific/Dragonair
14
3 Anchorage (ANC) United States 2,826,499 0.6
A major trans-Pacific transit point for carriers
including FedEx, UPS, Northwest
144
4 Seoul Incheon (ICN) South Korea 2,555,582 9.4
Hub for Korean Air; centerpiece of govern-
ment plan to foster Asia logistics business
20
5 Shanghai Pudong (PVG) China 2,494,808 15.5
Secondary hub for freighter operator Great
Wall Airlines China Eastern hub
38
6 Paris de Gaulle (CDG) France 2,297,896 7.8
Main hub for Air France; a European hub for
FedEx and La Poste
6
7 Tokyo Narita (NRT) Japan 2,252,654 - 1.2
Hub for Japan Airlines and gateway for
Northwest Airlines Cargo
24
8 Frankfurt/ /Main (FRA) Germany 2,169,025 1.9
Hub for Lufthansa Cargo; manager Fraport
also runs nearby Frankfurt Hahn Airport;
Main air hub for UPS
8
9 Louisville (SDF) United States 2,078,290 4.8
Main air hub for UPS, now taking on DHL Ex
domestic U.S. traffic
171
10 Miami (MIA) United States 1,922,982 5.0
Main gateway for U.S.-Latin America traffic;
regional hub for Amer. Airlines
29
11 Singapore (SIN) Singapore 1,918,159 - 0.7
Home to Singapore Airlines; Swissport
opened cargo terminal in 2005. as third freight
handler at Singapore Changi
19
12 Los Angeles (LAX) United States 1,877,876 - 1.5
Largest U.S.trans-Pacific gateway; FedEx has
largest single share of cargo; Korean Air is the
largest international carrier
5
13 Dubai (DXB)
United Arab
Emirates
1,668,506 11.0
Emirates base; Dubai Cargo Village being ex-
panded
27
14 Amsterdam Schiphol (AMS) Netherlands 1,651,385 5.4
Hub for KLM; AirBridge Cargo,Jade Cargo;
hosting TIACA Air Cargo Forum in 2010.
12
15 Taipei (TPE) Taiwan 1,605,681 - 5.5 Base for EVA Airways and China Airlines 58
16 New York Kennedy (JFK) United States 1,595,577 - 2.8
The largest U.S. trans-Atlantic gateway;
American Airlines holds more than 10% at
cargo market
13
17 Chicago O’Hare (ORD) United States 1,524,419 - 2.2 Main hub for United Airlines 2
18 London Heathrow (LHR)
United King-
dom
1,395,909 3.9 British Airways hub 3
19 Bangkok (BKK) Thailand 1,220,001 3.2
Thai Airways hub; the new Bangkok
Suvarnabhumi International Airport replaces
Don Muang Airport
18
20 Beijing (PEK) China 1,191,048 15.8
Main base for freighter operator Great Wall
Airlines, and for Air China Cargo
9
Source: Airports Council International, Airport reports, July 2008
the expansion remains the dominant feature on these
air freight markets.
Air-freight markets are shifting as the economic
growth pattern of developing countries accelerates
past that of the already industrialized economies. The
main influences behind these trends are:
– primary influence of the world economic activity;
– impact of the range of services in the express and
small package market;
– deregulation and liberalization;
– national development programs;
– stream of new air-eligible commodities;
– growth of e-commerce.
The deregulation of air freight raised cargo rates,
but gave shippers greater choice among carriers with
respect to rates, consequential damage, and excess
value charges. Under CAB regulation of air freight,
all-cargo operators were unable to generate reason-
able profits with the result that the quantity and qual-
ity of service were deteriorating. It was generally felt
that freight carried by air travelled longer distances
than was necessary because surface modes could not
be used to support the carriers operation [14].
Integrated carriers now offer multimodal services
that take advantage of the distance, cost, and time
trade-offs offered by different modes. In the Euro-
pean and Asian markets the integrated carriers have
recently increased the size of their international oper-
ations. Indeed, within Europe, it is estimated that the
integrated carriers now perform most of the total
intra-European RTKs. Within Europe, competition
from surface modes has had, and will continue to
have, a downward impact on air-freight growth rates.
This factor, along with a relatively low overall eco-
nomic growth rate, explains low average long-term
growth rate for air freight [19].
There is also one specific transport mode which in-
volves movement of air cargo by road under airway bill
(AWB). It is Air Trucking – also known as “road
feeder service”. Cargo that is transported by surface
(usually by dedicated truck) on an airway bill carriage
between origin and destination can be exclusively by
surface or may also feed into airport-to-airport air or
surface. Air Trucking has been expanding at a rate of
15% per annum since 1975.
International airlines through IATA introduced
and adopted IATA Resolution 507b, which clearly de-
fines the circumstances under which Air Trucking
could be undertaken. The main conditions include:
– lack of available space on aircraft;
– consignments that cannot be handled on aircraft
operated by an airline due to the size, weight, or
nature of the consignment (certain commodities
may only be shipped in freighter or all-cargo air-
craft), or because the carrier refused carriage on
some other grounds;
– carriage by air would have resulted in delayed tran-
sit times or in carriage not being accomplished
within 12 hours of acceptance, and
– carriage by air would have resulted in missed con-
nections.
Today, the practice of Air Trucking is predomi-
nantly oriented towards moving intercontinental
freight traffic to gateway airports. This process is
shown in Table 2, which helps illustrate the distin-
guishing characteristics of non-integrated operations
compared with integrated operations.
5. CONSTRAINTS AND FUTURE
PROSPECTS OF AIR FREIGHT
Several factors can be identified as significant con-
straints on the growth of air-freight. These include the
significant growth of Air-Trucking and the reduction
in freight carrying capacity of the passenger airlines.
Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298 295
F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services
Table 2 - Comparison of integrated and non-integrated services [1]
Integrated carrier/freight forwarder Non-integrated operation with air trucking
Shipper
Integrator:
– Picks up consignment
– Tags and electronically traces consignment until delivery
– Line-hauls package from airport to airport
– Clears customs
– Delivers to destination
Agent:
– Consolidates multiple shipments under a single AWB
– Delivers to airport bond
Air trucker:
– Picks up consignment and delivers to another airport
bond
Airline:
– Line-hauls consignment from airport to airport
Agent:
– Arranges customs clearance, collection and delivery
Consignee
In the longer term, the integrated operators and
all-cargo airlines can be expected to increase their
share of the air-freight market, as passenger carriers
are forced to charge more realistic cargo rates that are
in line with the costs of producing the services. Passen-
ger carriers have been facing declining passenger and
freight yields (revenue per seat-kilometer or tone-kilo-
meter) as competition has forced efficiencies on many
aspects of their operations. Environmental regulations
have affected air-freight sector by forcing a reduction
in the number of older, noisier aircraft available, and
have delayed or altered the infrastructure planning
process and contributed to the capacity constraints at
many airports, particularly in Europe. The noise and
pollution requirements, now in place at many of the
large airports, raise operating costs for many carriers.
The congestion of air transport infrastructure has been
identified in several studies as the major bottleneck in
the development of competitive air passenger and
freight transport markets in domestic and interna-
tional markets. Finally, security problems are a signifi-
cant factor constraining the growth and development
of both express operations and Air- Trucking.
Boeing’s World Air Cargo Forecast 2006/2007[6]
projected the air cargo industry to grow roughly at 6
percent per year through 2025. Although its new fore-
cast will not be released until November, Boeing exec-
utives remain optimistic.
This optimism is due to the fact that carriers are
currently upgrading their fleets with passenger planes
that aircraft manufacturers are converting with more
fuel-efficient engines, and on the other side we have
more products that accommodate increasingly higher
payloads [13].
The high cost of fuel is affecting the financial
health of nearly every air carrier on the global market.
As example we can mention the “Northwest”, which
plans to merge with “Delta Air Lines”, and recently
posted a quarterly net loss of $4.1 billion, partly due to
higher fuel charges. United Airlines also reported a
$537 million loss and is cutting more than 1100 jobs
and numerous flights [21].
Consequently, shippers are currently being
slapped with higher fuel surcharges. In an attempt to
help cut costs, some carriers implemented special
programmes, which encourages employees to provide
ideas that save fuel and energy [11].
Nevertheless, carriers are experiencing high de-
mand for airfreight, but they are becoming more se-
lective about the routes they serve.
For now, cargo volumes are shifting worldwide
based on a slowdown in key airfreight markets. It is
likely that the Boeing projections in 2006, air freight in
Asia to grow 8.5 percent, 5.3 percent in Europe and
4.1 percent in North America through 2023, will not
be realised [20].
The International Air Transport Association
(IATA) expects that international air freight volumes
through 2011 will continue to be dominated by Asia
Pacific. According to IATA, freight within Asia Pa-
cific, between Asia Pacific and North America and be-
tween Asia Pacific and Europe will account for 57 per-
cent of the 36 million tonnes of international air
freight tonnes in 2011, up from 55 percent in 2006.
The majority of this growth will be from the outbound
leg from Asia Pacific [15]. According to IATA, the in-
ternational Air Freight Shares in 2011 could be as fol-
lows:
– within Asia Pacific: 26%
– Europe- Asia Pacific: 18%
– Asia Pacific-North America: 13%
– Europe-North America: 12%
– within Europe: 6%
– North America-Latin America: 5%
– within Latin America: 1%
– within North America: 1%
– within Middle East: 1%
– Others: 17%
6. CONCLUSION
Air freight is a significantly more expensive mode
of carriage of goods than other modes, and will be
used when the value per unit weight of shipments is
relatively high and the speed of delivery is an impor-
tant factor. Under these circumstances, the transport
costs can comprise a small proportion of the revenue
associated with the products. The advantages offered
to the shippers through movement by air include
speed, particularly over long distances, lower risk of
damage, security, flexibility, accessibility for custom-
ers, and good frequency for regular destinations [18].
For integrated operators, the guaranteed delivery
and the facility to track consignments gives customers
additional advantages over standard air-freight car-
riage. These superior qualitative differences give rise
to higher rates for integrated services [16]. Over
shorter distances, air transport faces stiff competition
from surface modes and from combined road and sea
services. Air-freight demand varies by season, and this
is taken into account by carriers supplying airlift ca-
pacity.
The emphasis on multimodal transport operations
and on greater integration of transport with other lo-
gistical services will dominate freight developments in
the next two decades. While e-commerce eliminates
the need for physical distribution of some products
and services, it is dramatically altering the pattern of
consumption and generating new sources of business
for the air-freight industry.
296 Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298
F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services
Dr. FADILA KISO
E-mail: kiso@bih.net.ba
Dr. ABIDIN DELJANIN
E-mail: a_deljanin@hotmail.com
Univerzitet u Sarajevu, Fakultet za saobraæaj i komunikacije
Zmaja od Bosne 8, 71000 Sarajevo, Bosna i Hercegovina
SAÃETAK
ZRAÈNI TRANSPORT I LOGISTIÈKE USLUGE
Zraèni saobraæaj je postepeno poveæavao svoj udio u pro-
metu putnika i tereta, i ovaj trend biljeãi se u zadnjih 40 godina.
U proteklom desetljeæu, zraèni teretni transport ima veæi rast u
odnosu na prijevoz putnika, i to za 1-2% svake godine. U proš-
losti, ovaj sektor je nudio ogranièene usluge, koje su velikim
dijelom bile zavisne o nekolicini posrednika, a znaèajan dio je
ovisio o putnièkim operacijama. Zraèni transport se danas
moãe opisati kao sofisticirana, inovativna grana, koja se u
velikoj mjeri oslanja na nove elektronske tehnologije, s ponu-
dom širokog spektra transportnih i logistièkih usluga, preko
specijaliziranih cargo operatora. Sa sve veæom globalizacijom
trãista i ekonomskih aktivnosti, oèekuje se da æe rast zraènog
teretnog transporta nastaviti da nadmašuje rast putnièkog sao-
braæaja, i da æe ovaj rast biti najveæi na azijskom trãištu.
Proces fizièke distribucije tereta postala je veoma sofistici-
rana djelatnost, koja sve više ovisi o korištenju novih tehno-
logija koje pomaãu u prometu, skladištenju i praæenju pošiljki.
Transport je samo jedna karika u logistièkom lancu.
U ovome radu, zraèni teretni transport je analiziran s
aspekta strukture, organizacije, njegove uloge u lancu distribu-
cije, s aspekta glavnih trendova razvoja, kao i buduæe per-
spektive odnosno prepreka za razvoj ovoga sektora.
KLJUÈNE RIJEÈI
Organizacija zraènog transporta tereta, razvoj, trendovi, pro-
gnoza, logistièke usluge
LITERATURE
[1] A. M. Brewer, K. J. Button, D. A. Hensher: Handbook
of Logistics and Supply-Chain Management, Volume 2,
Pergamon, 2001
[2] K. J. Button, K. Haynes, R. Stough: Flying into the
future, Air transport Policy in the EU, 1998
[3] J. Simmons: Benefits of different transport modes,
ECMT Economic Research Centre, Paris, 1993
[4] K. E. Thuermer: International Air Freight Shares in
2011, Logistics Management, TIACA, 2008
[5] Global Market forecast t- The future of flying 2005-2025,
Airbus, 2005
[6] World Air Cargo Forecast 2006-2007, Boeing, 2006/2007
[7] Yonghwa Park, Hun-Koo Ha: Analysis of the impact of
high-speed railroad service on air transport demand,
Transportation Research Part E: Logistics and Trans-
portation Review, Vol. 42, No. 2, pp. 95-104, 2006
[8] A. Zhang, Y. Zhang: A model of air cargo liberalization:
passenger vs. All-cargo carriers, Transportation Re-
search Part E: Logistics and Transportation Review,
Vol. 38, No. 3-4, pp. 175-191, 2002
[9] T. H. Uom, A. Zhang, W. Swan: Air cargo logistics and
hub developments, Transportation Research Part E:
Logistics and Transportation Review, Vol. 40, No. 2,
2004
[10] S. D. Barrett: How do the demands for airport services
differ between full-service carriers and low-cost carriers,
Journal of Air Transport Management, Vol. 10, No. 1,
pp. 33-39, 2004
[11] Ch. Hofer, M. E. Dresner, R. Y. Windle: The impact of
airline financial distress on US air fares: Contingency
approach, Transportation Research Part E: Logistics
and Transportation Review, Vol. 45, No. 1, pp. 238-
-249, 2008
[12] Y. Zhang, D. K. Round: China’s deregulation since 1997
and the driving forces behind the 2002 airline consolida-
tions, Journal of Air Transport Management, Vol. 14,
No. 3, pp. 130-142, 2008
[13] P. Morrell, W. Swan: Airline Jet Fuel Hedging: Theory
and Practice, Transport Reviews: A Transnational
Transdisciplinary Journal, Vol. 26, No. 6, pp. 713-730,
2006
[14] M. Alderigh, A. Cento, P. Nijkamp, P. Rietveld: Assess-
ment of new Hub-and-Spoke and Point-to Point Airline
Network Configurations, Transport Reviews: A Trans-
national Transdisciplinary Journal, Vol. 27, No. 5, pp.
529-549, 2007
[15] J. T. Bowen: The geography of freighter aircraft operati-
ons in the Pacific Basin, Journal of Transport Geo-
graphy, Vol. 12, No. 1, pp. 1-11, 2004
[16] T. H. Oum, N. Adler, Chunyan Yu: Privatization, Cor-
poratization, Ownership forms and their effects on the
Performance of the world’s major Airports, Journal of
Air Transport Management, Vol. 12, No. 3, pp. 109-
-121, 2006
[17] F. Alamdari, K. Mason: The future of airline distribu-
tion, Journal of Air Transport Management, Vol. 12,
No. 3, pp. 122-134, 2006
[18] H. Vega: Air cargo, trade and transportation Costs of
perishables and exotics from South America, Journal of
Air Transport Management, Vol. 14, No. 6, pp. 324-
-328, 2008
[19] Loyola de Palacio: Main priorities in European air
Transport, Air & Space Europe, Vol. 3, No. 1-2, 2001
[20] http://www.iata.org
[21] http://www.fraport-cargo.com
[22] http://www.lufthansa-cargo.com
ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS
ACI – Airports Council International
AWB – Airway Bill
CARGO – Freight, express and airmail
CRS – Computer Reservation System
GDP – Gross Domestic Product; the total output of goods
and services within a country
GSA – General Sales Agent
IATA – International Air Transport Association
JIT – Just-in-Time, A manufacturing and distribution ap-
proach that meets immediate needs as opposed to rely-
ing on large inventories
Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298 297
F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services
RTK – Revenue Tonne-kilometer
INTEGRATOR – cargo company that offers its customers
complete services: pickup, airport-to-airport transport,
delivery, and all supporting ancillary services
DHL; TNT; FedEx; UPS – Air Carriers-Integrators.
298 Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298
F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services

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Air_Freight_and_Logistics_Services (1).pdf

  • 1. FADILA KISO, Ph.D. E-mail: kiso@bih.net.ba ABIDIN DELJANIN, Ph.D. E-mail: a_deljanin@hotmail.com University of Sarajevo, Faculty of Traffic and Communications Zmaja od Bosne 8, 71000 Sarajevo, Bosnia&Herzegovina Distribution Logistics Review Accepted: Oct. 10, 2008 Approved: June 18, 2009 F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services 291-298 AIR FREIGHT AND LOGISTICS SERVICES ABSTRACT Air transport industry has gradually increased its share of global passenger and freight traffic, and this trend has acceler- ated in the last 40 years. For the past decade, air-freight traffic growth has outpaced air passenger traffic growth by 1-2% each year. In the past, air-freight sector offered limited services, with heavy reliance on several intermediaries and a significant de- pendence on air passenger operations. The sector can now be characterized as a sophisticated, innovative one, relying heavily on new electronic technologies, offering a wide range of trans- port and logistical products through dedicated specialist freight operators. With increasing emphasis on the globalization of trade and economic activity, air-freight growth is expected to continue to outpace air passenger traffic growth. The air-freight growth is expected to be greatest in the Asian markets (intra- -Asia; North America-Asia; Europe-Asia and Australasia). The process of physical distribution of freight has become a highly sophisticated operation, with increasingly greater reli- ance being placed on the use of new technology to assist in the movement, storage, and tracking of consignments. But trans- port is just one component in this logistics chain. In this paper, air-freight sector is examined in terms of its structure, organiza- tion, its role in the supply chains, the main trends in the recent period, constraints facing the sector and the future prospects in air-freight sector. KEY WORDS air freight organization, development, trends, forecast, logistics services 1. INTRODUCTION The correlation between the world gross domestic product (GDP) and the world air-freight traffic forms the basis for traffic forecasts. Because of the cyclical nature of GDP growth, air-freight traffic growth is also subject to cyclical effects. World air freight growth typically outpaced GDP growth, by a factor of more than two. Although economic activity is the primary influ- ence on the world air freight development, many other factors must be considered. Those other factors that effect the airborne freight growth rate include avail- able capacity, freight yields, jet fuel prices, relative current strengths regulations, national industrial ini- tiatives, and development of other transport modes (land and maritime competition) [7]. For example, after a strong surge of 12% annual growth in 2004, the world air freight traffic as mea- sured in revenue tonne-kilometers (RTK), slowed down to just 2% growth in 2005. Much of the reduc- tion in traffic growth in 2005 was due to the diversion of some long-haul traffic from normal air freight chan- nels to maritime trade lanes. As jet fuel prices rose throughout 2005, fuel surcharges added to basic air freight rates made air freight increasingly expensive, prompting shippers to move their goods by other transport modes (mostly to maritime transport for the long-haul traffic). 2. ORGANIZATION AND STRUCTURE OF AIR-FREIGHT SECTOR For a number of reasons, air-freight markets are difficult to delimit and analyze. Air freight providers are a heterogeneous group of operators. They offer different types and different levels of logistics services. There are three main categories of air-freight opera- tors: 1) Line-haul operators, 2) Integrated/courier/express operators, and 3) Niche operators. Line-haul operators move freight from airport to airport, and rely on freight forwarders or consolida- tors to deal directly with customers. Line-haul opera- tors can be: – All-cargo operators (scheduled and non-sched- uled), moving only freight in dedicated freighter or cargo aircraft such as Cargolux (European Union) or Arrow Air (USA). All-cargo operators offer rel- atively high reliability and have the capability to move large volumes over long distances. – Combination passenger and cargo operators, which use both dedicated freighter aircraft and the belly Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298 291 F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services
  • 2. holds in passenger aircraft to move freight, such as Lufthansa (European Union) or United Airlines (USA). For the combination carriers, cargo opera- tions are mainly long-haul, with a large amount of freight being interlined onto shorter haul feeder services. High utilization of long-haul aircraft justi- fies the purchase of new aircraft for these services. – Passenger operators, that use the belly holds in pas- senger aircraft. Passenger carriers tend to view cargo as a by-product of passenger operations. They are considered to offer the lowest prices and the least reliable service. Passenger carriers move cargo in the belly holds of passenger aircraft, where it has traditionally taken second place to passenger services. Unlike passenger services, shippers do not have access to price information analogous to passenger computer reservation sys- tems (CRSs). Freight forwarders play an important role in con- solidating shipments for line-haulers. Integrated/courier/express operators move con- signments from door to door, with time-definite deliv- ery services (e.g. UPS; Federal Express; TNT; DHL). These integrated carriers operate multimodal net- works, combining air services with extensive surface transport to meet customer demands. Integrated op- erators offer a variety of services to shippers, and sup- plement air services with extensive ground transport to provide time-definite delivery with continuous ship- ment tracking and, with logistical expertise to support just-in-time (JIT) inventory control strategies. In or- der for integrated operators to be able to offer door-to-door next day deliveries, they require night-time operations. In terms of aircraft require- ments then, they need to operate quiet and reliable aircraft, with low utilization levels. These operators seek to purchase a combination of new aircraft, with high capital costs and better utilization on long-haul segments, with less expensive renovated second-hand aircraft for the medium-haul operations with lower utilizations. The integrated carriers initially began of- fering services in the small parcel/document sector, but now typically offer a broad range of services. The Association of integrators with purely express freight is no longer valid. The integrators have focused their attention on the premium high-yield traffic. Legisla- tive changes in the USA have permitted integrated freight forwarders to line-haul their consignments themselves, and since 1994 interstate ground opera- tions for all carriers have been deregulated. Niche operators operate with specialized equip- ment and technology, in order to meet extraordinary requirements (e.g., Heavy lift from the Netherlands and Challenge Air Cargo from USA). These opera- tors attract business through their capabilities for han- dling outside freight or special consignments, includ- ing line-haul to locations with poor infrastructure fa- cilities. For chartered freight and niche operators, the discontinuous use of aircraft makes it financially pref- erable to acquire freighter aircraft on a second-hand basis. Air-freight industry was dominated until the mid-1980s by the line-haul carriers. Following deregu- lation in this sector, which started in 1977, the inte- grated carriers rapidly increased their market share and most recently in international air-freight markets. There are several important distinctions between pas- senger demand and shipper demands for air transport services. These distinctions place a different set of constraints and operating conditions on carriers de- pending on whether they are carrying cargo, passen- gers, or both. Freight comes in a large variety of shapes, densities, and sizes, and must be loaded onto and off aircraft by equipment and handlers. Large units may have to be carried in freighter-only aircraft. The routing of cargo, including the number of stops or transfers, is unimportant to the shipper. What is im- portant is the lapsed time between pick-up and deliv- ery. For passengers, however, their preference is typi- cally for daytime, non-stop flights. Shippers’ prefer- ences are for night-time carriage of goods, with early morning delivery. One of the most significant differences between passenger and freight air transport lies in the fact that passenger typically travel on round-trip journeys, while cargo travels from a point of production to a point of consummation [8]. Matching demand with in- bound and outbound capacity is a difficult task and can lead to different network organizations for freight services compared with passenger services. For com- bination carriers, this can pose difficulties, since freight demand and passenger demand for principal destinations may not coincide. Carriers will take ac- count of inbound and outbound requirements in con- sidering, and in deciding on the segments of the route and capacity available on each of the segments. 3. AIR-FREIGHT PRICING Air-freight services are sold and marketed in a number of different ways. The line-haul operators sell a relatively small proportion of their cargo space di- rectly to their customers. The greater proportion of their space is sold through general sales agents (GSAs), or freight forwarders, who negotiate with the airlines for fixed amounts of space. The agents or for- warders then sell on the freight space to customers. The line-haul airlines publish their cargo tariffs as agreed at International Air Transport Association (IATA) tariff conferences. In practice, only a small percentage of customers pay these published tariffs, which can be considered as an upper-band on air 292 Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298 F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services
  • 3. cargo rates. As with passenger fares, discounting is widely applied on the basis of different circumstances [10]. In case of cargo the rates will be determined on the basis of a number of characteristics and circum- stances, including the following: – volume, density and weight of shipments; – commodity type; – routing; – season; – regularity of shipments; – imports or exports and – priority or speed of delivery. Consolidated shipments, aggregated by forwarders and carried by the line-haul operators, typically travel under a single air waybill (AWB). The freight forward- ers offer shippers a wide range of logistical and trans- port services and options [9]. These include collection and door-to-door delivery of shipments, complete documentation and paper- work for customs purposes, customs clearance, track- ing of shipments, and control. The freight forwarders act as wholesalers and earn their profit by maximizing the difference between what they pay the airlines and other carriers and what they can charge the shippers. The integrated operators offer a variety of services depending on: – the weight of the consignment, and – the speed of delivery required by the customer. Discounting is applied to these services on the ba- sis of volume and regularity of custom. However, be- cause each consignment is treated as a separate piece of freight, with an individual air waybill and customs declaration, the integrated carriers provide and prac- tice electronic tracking of individual shipments, and levy charges individually. Customs services in many jurisdictions now oper- ate electronically, so that consignments receive clear- ance on route to their destination airport [17]. The customs authority can notify the operator of consign- ments that will need to be cleared on the ground, and this information can be forwarded to the customer via the tracking system. 4. RECENT TRENDS IN AIR-FREIGHT TRANSPORT In global terms, the dominant air cargo flows are in three main markets: – Asia-North America, – North America-Europe, and – Europe-Far East. Table 1 lists the top 20 air-freight airports in the world in 2007. Table 1 includes the rank of each air- port in terms of air passenger traffic, and highlights the distinctions in network organization of combina- tion carriers and integrated carriers. The line - haul combination carriers tend to focus their cargo operations on international gateway air- ports, allowing consolidation or break-out loads to be transferred between long-haul and short-haul ser- vices. The gateway airport is international airport which is the first point of arrival or the last point of de- parture in a state for international air services. The integrated carriers focus their operations at cargo hubs that do not necessarily have very high vol- umes of passenger traffic. The “Air Cargo World List” (Table 1) of the world’s largest cargo airports, compiled from numbers from Airports Council International and the airports, shows “Memphis International”, home to Federal Ex- press (FedEx), still at No. 1 in the world. “Hong Kong International” has remained No. 2 for international air transport, and Hong Kong is edg- ing closer to Memphis. Hong Kong’s growth outpaced Memphis during the last year, and again in the first few months of 2008, putting Hong Kong in reach of surpassing the world’s longtime top cargo airport. At No. 5 overall, “Shanghai Pudong” has remained the top growth market by cargo volume, with a 15.5 percent growth, reflecting the continued potential from the world’s most populated country. “Seoul Incheon” has remained No. 4, despite a slowdown from its primary carrier, Korean Air, as well as the threat posed by the Chinese airports as alterna- tive gateways for Northeast Asia. China figures strate- gically in Incheon’s development. Last year, transship- ment traffic for the first time surpassed origin/destina- tion cargo, and China accounted for a large portion of that cargo [12]. “Anchorage International”, a transit stop for East-West traffic, remains at No. 3 spot and all signs point to further growth in cargo volume at this Alas- kan gateway. “Frankfurt” came in at No. 7, despite only posting a 1.9 percent growth in tonnage last year. Lufthansa and DHL Express must contend with onerous night-time flight restrictions that allow for only 17 flights between 11 p. m. and 5 a. m., and because of that, they move cargo to Leipzig and elsewhere. A bright spot for airport expansion remain the Middle East and India. At No. 13, “Dubai”, which has become a viable gateway for cargo to Europe and Asia and transit point for cargo from Africa, grew 11 percent in cargo volume last year. Dubai is not the only cargo centre of note in the Middle East. Some airports, like “Abu Dhabi” and “Sharjah”, with 22.7 percent and 16.2 percent traffic growth in 2007, re- spectively, continue to inch up the list of the world Top 50 cargo airports. Freight tonnage for “Mumbai” (No. 36) and “New Delhi” (No. 42) continue to in- Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298 293 F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services
  • 4. crease by 12.1 percent and 8.7 percent in 2007, despite an infrastructure that significantly limits long-term growth. A disturbing trend is the continued decline in cargo volume at many U. S. gateways. Cargo volume at “New York‘s John F. Kennedy” and “Newark” air- ports declined last year 2.8 percent and 2.7 percent, re- spectively. Cargo volume also declined at “Chicago O’Hare”, “Oakland”, “Dallas/Ft Worth”, and many other North American cargo airports. Even growth at the front-running Middle East and Asia airports, whose growth in the past led the way, is likely to continue to taper off until the economy im- proves and fuel costs become manageable. For now, 294 Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298 F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services Table 1 - Air-freight tonnage for the top 20 freight airports (2007) Cargo Rank Airport Country Tonnage % change in freight Comments Passenger Rank 1 Memphis (MEM) United States 3,840,574 4.0 The main hub for edEx;also a regional passen- ger hub for Nordwest Airlines 87 2 Hong Kong (HKG) China 3,772,673 4.5 Third cargo terminal to be finished in 2011; an Asia hub for DHL and main hub for Cathay Pacific/Dragonair 14 3 Anchorage (ANC) United States 2,826,499 0.6 A major trans-Pacific transit point for carriers including FedEx, UPS, Northwest 144 4 Seoul Incheon (ICN) South Korea 2,555,582 9.4 Hub for Korean Air; centerpiece of govern- ment plan to foster Asia logistics business 20 5 Shanghai Pudong (PVG) China 2,494,808 15.5 Secondary hub for freighter operator Great Wall Airlines China Eastern hub 38 6 Paris de Gaulle (CDG) France 2,297,896 7.8 Main hub for Air France; a European hub for FedEx and La Poste 6 7 Tokyo Narita (NRT) Japan 2,252,654 - 1.2 Hub for Japan Airlines and gateway for Northwest Airlines Cargo 24 8 Frankfurt/ /Main (FRA) Germany 2,169,025 1.9 Hub for Lufthansa Cargo; manager Fraport also runs nearby Frankfurt Hahn Airport; Main air hub for UPS 8 9 Louisville (SDF) United States 2,078,290 4.8 Main air hub for UPS, now taking on DHL Ex domestic U.S. traffic 171 10 Miami (MIA) United States 1,922,982 5.0 Main gateway for U.S.-Latin America traffic; regional hub for Amer. Airlines 29 11 Singapore (SIN) Singapore 1,918,159 - 0.7 Home to Singapore Airlines; Swissport opened cargo terminal in 2005. as third freight handler at Singapore Changi 19 12 Los Angeles (LAX) United States 1,877,876 - 1.5 Largest U.S.trans-Pacific gateway; FedEx has largest single share of cargo; Korean Air is the largest international carrier 5 13 Dubai (DXB) United Arab Emirates 1,668,506 11.0 Emirates base; Dubai Cargo Village being ex- panded 27 14 Amsterdam Schiphol (AMS) Netherlands 1,651,385 5.4 Hub for KLM; AirBridge Cargo,Jade Cargo; hosting TIACA Air Cargo Forum in 2010. 12 15 Taipei (TPE) Taiwan 1,605,681 - 5.5 Base for EVA Airways and China Airlines 58 16 New York Kennedy (JFK) United States 1,595,577 - 2.8 The largest U.S. trans-Atlantic gateway; American Airlines holds more than 10% at cargo market 13 17 Chicago O’Hare (ORD) United States 1,524,419 - 2.2 Main hub for United Airlines 2 18 London Heathrow (LHR) United King- dom 1,395,909 3.9 British Airways hub 3 19 Bangkok (BKK) Thailand 1,220,001 3.2 Thai Airways hub; the new Bangkok Suvarnabhumi International Airport replaces Don Muang Airport 18 20 Beijing (PEK) China 1,191,048 15.8 Main base for freighter operator Great Wall Airlines, and for Air China Cargo 9 Source: Airports Council International, Airport reports, July 2008
  • 5. the expansion remains the dominant feature on these air freight markets. Air-freight markets are shifting as the economic growth pattern of developing countries accelerates past that of the already industrialized economies. The main influences behind these trends are: – primary influence of the world economic activity; – impact of the range of services in the express and small package market; – deregulation and liberalization; – national development programs; – stream of new air-eligible commodities; – growth of e-commerce. The deregulation of air freight raised cargo rates, but gave shippers greater choice among carriers with respect to rates, consequential damage, and excess value charges. Under CAB regulation of air freight, all-cargo operators were unable to generate reason- able profits with the result that the quantity and qual- ity of service were deteriorating. It was generally felt that freight carried by air travelled longer distances than was necessary because surface modes could not be used to support the carriers operation [14]. Integrated carriers now offer multimodal services that take advantage of the distance, cost, and time trade-offs offered by different modes. In the Euro- pean and Asian markets the integrated carriers have recently increased the size of their international oper- ations. Indeed, within Europe, it is estimated that the integrated carriers now perform most of the total intra-European RTKs. Within Europe, competition from surface modes has had, and will continue to have, a downward impact on air-freight growth rates. This factor, along with a relatively low overall eco- nomic growth rate, explains low average long-term growth rate for air freight [19]. There is also one specific transport mode which in- volves movement of air cargo by road under airway bill (AWB). It is Air Trucking – also known as “road feeder service”. Cargo that is transported by surface (usually by dedicated truck) on an airway bill carriage between origin and destination can be exclusively by surface or may also feed into airport-to-airport air or surface. Air Trucking has been expanding at a rate of 15% per annum since 1975. International airlines through IATA introduced and adopted IATA Resolution 507b, which clearly de- fines the circumstances under which Air Trucking could be undertaken. The main conditions include: – lack of available space on aircraft; – consignments that cannot be handled on aircraft operated by an airline due to the size, weight, or nature of the consignment (certain commodities may only be shipped in freighter or all-cargo air- craft), or because the carrier refused carriage on some other grounds; – carriage by air would have resulted in delayed tran- sit times or in carriage not being accomplished within 12 hours of acceptance, and – carriage by air would have resulted in missed con- nections. Today, the practice of Air Trucking is predomi- nantly oriented towards moving intercontinental freight traffic to gateway airports. This process is shown in Table 2, which helps illustrate the distin- guishing characteristics of non-integrated operations compared with integrated operations. 5. CONSTRAINTS AND FUTURE PROSPECTS OF AIR FREIGHT Several factors can be identified as significant con- straints on the growth of air-freight. These include the significant growth of Air-Trucking and the reduction in freight carrying capacity of the passenger airlines. Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298 295 F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services Table 2 - Comparison of integrated and non-integrated services [1] Integrated carrier/freight forwarder Non-integrated operation with air trucking Shipper Integrator: – Picks up consignment – Tags and electronically traces consignment until delivery – Line-hauls package from airport to airport – Clears customs – Delivers to destination Agent: – Consolidates multiple shipments under a single AWB – Delivers to airport bond Air trucker: – Picks up consignment and delivers to another airport bond Airline: – Line-hauls consignment from airport to airport Agent: – Arranges customs clearance, collection and delivery Consignee
  • 6. In the longer term, the integrated operators and all-cargo airlines can be expected to increase their share of the air-freight market, as passenger carriers are forced to charge more realistic cargo rates that are in line with the costs of producing the services. Passen- ger carriers have been facing declining passenger and freight yields (revenue per seat-kilometer or tone-kilo- meter) as competition has forced efficiencies on many aspects of their operations. Environmental regulations have affected air-freight sector by forcing a reduction in the number of older, noisier aircraft available, and have delayed or altered the infrastructure planning process and contributed to the capacity constraints at many airports, particularly in Europe. The noise and pollution requirements, now in place at many of the large airports, raise operating costs for many carriers. The congestion of air transport infrastructure has been identified in several studies as the major bottleneck in the development of competitive air passenger and freight transport markets in domestic and interna- tional markets. Finally, security problems are a signifi- cant factor constraining the growth and development of both express operations and Air- Trucking. Boeing’s World Air Cargo Forecast 2006/2007[6] projected the air cargo industry to grow roughly at 6 percent per year through 2025. Although its new fore- cast will not be released until November, Boeing exec- utives remain optimistic. This optimism is due to the fact that carriers are currently upgrading their fleets with passenger planes that aircraft manufacturers are converting with more fuel-efficient engines, and on the other side we have more products that accommodate increasingly higher payloads [13]. The high cost of fuel is affecting the financial health of nearly every air carrier on the global market. As example we can mention the “Northwest”, which plans to merge with “Delta Air Lines”, and recently posted a quarterly net loss of $4.1 billion, partly due to higher fuel charges. United Airlines also reported a $537 million loss and is cutting more than 1100 jobs and numerous flights [21]. Consequently, shippers are currently being slapped with higher fuel surcharges. In an attempt to help cut costs, some carriers implemented special programmes, which encourages employees to provide ideas that save fuel and energy [11]. Nevertheless, carriers are experiencing high de- mand for airfreight, but they are becoming more se- lective about the routes they serve. For now, cargo volumes are shifting worldwide based on a slowdown in key airfreight markets. It is likely that the Boeing projections in 2006, air freight in Asia to grow 8.5 percent, 5.3 percent in Europe and 4.1 percent in North America through 2023, will not be realised [20]. The International Air Transport Association (IATA) expects that international air freight volumes through 2011 will continue to be dominated by Asia Pacific. According to IATA, freight within Asia Pa- cific, between Asia Pacific and North America and be- tween Asia Pacific and Europe will account for 57 per- cent of the 36 million tonnes of international air freight tonnes in 2011, up from 55 percent in 2006. The majority of this growth will be from the outbound leg from Asia Pacific [15]. According to IATA, the in- ternational Air Freight Shares in 2011 could be as fol- lows: – within Asia Pacific: 26% – Europe- Asia Pacific: 18% – Asia Pacific-North America: 13% – Europe-North America: 12% – within Europe: 6% – North America-Latin America: 5% – within Latin America: 1% – within North America: 1% – within Middle East: 1% – Others: 17% 6. CONCLUSION Air freight is a significantly more expensive mode of carriage of goods than other modes, and will be used when the value per unit weight of shipments is relatively high and the speed of delivery is an impor- tant factor. Under these circumstances, the transport costs can comprise a small proportion of the revenue associated with the products. The advantages offered to the shippers through movement by air include speed, particularly over long distances, lower risk of damage, security, flexibility, accessibility for custom- ers, and good frequency for regular destinations [18]. For integrated operators, the guaranteed delivery and the facility to track consignments gives customers additional advantages over standard air-freight car- riage. These superior qualitative differences give rise to higher rates for integrated services [16]. Over shorter distances, air transport faces stiff competition from surface modes and from combined road and sea services. Air-freight demand varies by season, and this is taken into account by carriers supplying airlift ca- pacity. The emphasis on multimodal transport operations and on greater integration of transport with other lo- gistical services will dominate freight developments in the next two decades. While e-commerce eliminates the need for physical distribution of some products and services, it is dramatically altering the pattern of consumption and generating new sources of business for the air-freight industry. 296 Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298 F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services
  • 7. Dr. FADILA KISO E-mail: kiso@bih.net.ba Dr. ABIDIN DELJANIN E-mail: a_deljanin@hotmail.com Univerzitet u Sarajevu, Fakultet za saobraæaj i komunikacije Zmaja od Bosne 8, 71000 Sarajevo, Bosna i Hercegovina SAÃETAK ZRAÈNI TRANSPORT I LOGISTIÈKE USLUGE Zraèni saobraæaj je postepeno poveæavao svoj udio u pro- metu putnika i tereta, i ovaj trend biljeãi se u zadnjih 40 godina. U proteklom desetljeæu, zraèni teretni transport ima veæi rast u odnosu na prijevoz putnika, i to za 1-2% svake godine. U proš- losti, ovaj sektor je nudio ogranièene usluge, koje su velikim dijelom bile zavisne o nekolicini posrednika, a znaèajan dio je ovisio o putnièkim operacijama. Zraèni transport se danas moãe opisati kao sofisticirana, inovativna grana, koja se u velikoj mjeri oslanja na nove elektronske tehnologije, s ponu- dom širokog spektra transportnih i logistièkih usluga, preko specijaliziranih cargo operatora. Sa sve veæom globalizacijom trãista i ekonomskih aktivnosti, oèekuje se da æe rast zraènog teretnog transporta nastaviti da nadmašuje rast putnièkog sao- braæaja, i da æe ovaj rast biti najveæi na azijskom trãištu. Proces fizièke distribucije tereta postala je veoma sofistici- rana djelatnost, koja sve više ovisi o korištenju novih tehno- logija koje pomaãu u prometu, skladištenju i praæenju pošiljki. Transport je samo jedna karika u logistièkom lancu. U ovome radu, zraèni teretni transport je analiziran s aspekta strukture, organizacije, njegove uloge u lancu distribu- cije, s aspekta glavnih trendova razvoja, kao i buduæe per- spektive odnosno prepreka za razvoj ovoga sektora. KLJUÈNE RIJEÈI Organizacija zraènog transporta tereta, razvoj, trendovi, pro- gnoza, logistièke usluge LITERATURE [1] A. M. Brewer, K. J. Button, D. A. Hensher: Handbook of Logistics and Supply-Chain Management, Volume 2, Pergamon, 2001 [2] K. J. Button, K. Haynes, R. Stough: Flying into the future, Air transport Policy in the EU, 1998 [3] J. Simmons: Benefits of different transport modes, ECMT Economic Research Centre, Paris, 1993 [4] K. E. Thuermer: International Air Freight Shares in 2011, Logistics Management, TIACA, 2008 [5] Global Market forecast t- The future of flying 2005-2025, Airbus, 2005 [6] World Air Cargo Forecast 2006-2007, Boeing, 2006/2007 [7] Yonghwa Park, Hun-Koo Ha: Analysis of the impact of high-speed railroad service on air transport demand, Transportation Research Part E: Logistics and Trans- portation Review, Vol. 42, No. 2, pp. 95-104, 2006 [8] A. Zhang, Y. Zhang: A model of air cargo liberalization: passenger vs. All-cargo carriers, Transportation Re- search Part E: Logistics and Transportation Review, Vol. 38, No. 3-4, pp. 175-191, 2002 [9] T. H. Uom, A. Zhang, W. Swan: Air cargo logistics and hub developments, Transportation Research Part E: Logistics and Transportation Review, Vol. 40, No. 2, 2004 [10] S. D. Barrett: How do the demands for airport services differ between full-service carriers and low-cost carriers, Journal of Air Transport Management, Vol. 10, No. 1, pp. 33-39, 2004 [11] Ch. Hofer, M. E. Dresner, R. Y. Windle: The impact of airline financial distress on US air fares: Contingency approach, Transportation Research Part E: Logistics and Transportation Review, Vol. 45, No. 1, pp. 238- -249, 2008 [12] Y. Zhang, D. K. Round: China’s deregulation since 1997 and the driving forces behind the 2002 airline consolida- tions, Journal of Air Transport Management, Vol. 14, No. 3, pp. 130-142, 2008 [13] P. Morrell, W. Swan: Airline Jet Fuel Hedging: Theory and Practice, Transport Reviews: A Transnational Transdisciplinary Journal, Vol. 26, No. 6, pp. 713-730, 2006 [14] M. Alderigh, A. Cento, P. Nijkamp, P. Rietveld: Assess- ment of new Hub-and-Spoke and Point-to Point Airline Network Configurations, Transport Reviews: A Trans- national Transdisciplinary Journal, Vol. 27, No. 5, pp. 529-549, 2007 [15] J. T. Bowen: The geography of freighter aircraft operati- ons in the Pacific Basin, Journal of Transport Geo- graphy, Vol. 12, No. 1, pp. 1-11, 2004 [16] T. H. Oum, N. Adler, Chunyan Yu: Privatization, Cor- poratization, Ownership forms and their effects on the Performance of the world’s major Airports, Journal of Air Transport Management, Vol. 12, No. 3, pp. 109- -121, 2006 [17] F. Alamdari, K. Mason: The future of airline distribu- tion, Journal of Air Transport Management, Vol. 12, No. 3, pp. 122-134, 2006 [18] H. Vega: Air cargo, trade and transportation Costs of perishables and exotics from South America, Journal of Air Transport Management, Vol. 14, No. 6, pp. 324- -328, 2008 [19] Loyola de Palacio: Main priorities in European air Transport, Air & Space Europe, Vol. 3, No. 1-2, 2001 [20] http://www.iata.org [21] http://www.fraport-cargo.com [22] http://www.lufthansa-cargo.com ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS ACI – Airports Council International AWB – Airway Bill CARGO – Freight, express and airmail CRS – Computer Reservation System GDP – Gross Domestic Product; the total output of goods and services within a country GSA – General Sales Agent IATA – International Air Transport Association JIT – Just-in-Time, A manufacturing and distribution ap- proach that meets immediate needs as opposed to rely- ing on large inventories Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298 297 F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services
  • 8. RTK – Revenue Tonne-kilometer INTEGRATOR – cargo company that offers its customers complete services: pickup, airport-to-airport transport, delivery, and all supporting ancillary services DHL; TNT; FedEx; UPS – Air Carriers-Integrators. 298 Promet – Traffic&Transportation, Vol. 21, 2009, No. 4, 291-298 F. Kiso, A. Deljanin: Air Freight and Logistics Services