Air Canada sees cargo advantage in Toronto hub as
shippers avoid U.S. crunch
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[August 20, 2021] By
Allison Lampert and Sanjana Shivdas
(Reuters) - Air Canada sees a "strategic
advantage" for its cargo business in Canadian hubs like Toronto as
shippers seek to bypass logjams at some U.S. gateways.
Lifted by e-commerce demand, cargo-only flights emerged as a lifeline
for carriers during the pandemic when commercial traffic slumped. Half
of air cargo normally travels in the belly of passenger jets.
While North American airlines are reducing all-cargo flights as
passenger traffic rebounds, that shift is more gradual in Canada due to
a slower easing of travel restrictions.
Cargo remains important for Canada's largest carrier, accounting for 43%
of second-quarter revenue, even as it restores passenger flights, a
company executive told Reuters.
"We (cargo) were a single-digit piece of the business before COVID. We
hope to be a bigger part of that in the future," Jason Berry, Air
Canada's vice president for cargo, said in an interview, without
providing a target.
Air Canada's ambition comes as international air cargo volume hit its
strongest first-half growth since 2017, airline trade group IATA said.
But staffing shortages and space constraints have exacerbated congestion
at hubs like Chicago's O'Hare International Airport and at some U.S.
ports.
U.S. railroad operator Union Pacific Corp recently warned that
bottlenecks at West Coast ports have spread East, impacting some inland
terminals, including Chicago.
BYPASSING CONGESTION
Air Canada, which trucks cargo arriving at Toronto Pearson International
Airport to its facilities in Chicago and New York, could appeal to
freight forwarders seeking alternatives like secondary U.S. airports to
bypass the congestion, said Brandon Fried, executive director of the
Airforwarders Association.
"Many of the airports in the U.S. in particular have ramped up quickly,
and with that rapid growth there has been operational challenges. We’re
seeing congestion, massive lines and wait times to recover product at
major gateways," Air Canada's Berry said.
"We have our own facility in Chicago with our own employees, while a lot
of our competitors are suffering because the U.S. has seen such a quick
rebound that there is a lot of struggle for manpower down there," he
said.
"With our own facilities we can control our own destiny and effectively
bypass much of the disruption. We believe we have a strategic advantage
in our Toronto hub, actually all of our hubs: Vancouver, Toronto and
Montreal."
Keeping employees to handle cargo, as opposed to contracting out such
tasks, helps airlines have more control over service and workforce when
there is a labor shortage, said Stan Wraight, president of
Montreal-based Strategic Aviation Solutions International (SASI).
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Air Canada planes are parked at Toronto Pearson Airport in
Mississauga, Ontario, Canada April 28, 2021. REUTERS/Carlos Osorio
Air Canada's services could be competitive on time against carriers that fly
indirectly to O’Hare, said Wraight, of SASI, which advises airlines, airports
and financial organizations on air cargo logistics.
However, the Canadian carrier would lose advantages in efficiency against
airlines that offer non-stop direct service to Chicago, he said.
"Competitors of Air Canada with direct flights are on the ground and unloading
cargo a day earlier," said Wraight, whose company has previously done work for
the carrier.
Shawn Richard, vice president for global air freight at SEKO Logistics, said the
company has increased its volumes with Air Canada, which he said can save two to
three days' time.
SEKO, a U.S.-based global logistics and freight forwarding specialist that also
uses certain U.S. carriers, would increase business with Air Canada if the
"situation deteriorates," Richard said.
CARGO SURGE
O'Hare has processed nearly 1.3 million metric tonnes of cargo through the first
half of 2021, a near 50% surge from a year ago, according to the Chicago
Department of Aviation (CDA).
Soaring shipments "challenge O’Hare’s cargo ramps, both airside and landside,"
but the CDA is taking steps to alleviate congestion and expand cargo facilities,
a spokeswoman said by email.
Berry said Air Canada's introduction of new converted Boeing 767 freighters this
year will help its business even as it draws down cargo-only flights on widebody
passenger jets from roughly 285 a week during the second quarter to around 125
flights a week later this year.
Freighters, equipped with pallets and a main deck cargo door, are easier to
unload than "loose-loaded" passenger planes that moved cargo onto the main deck
during the pandemic, Wraight said.
Berry said the return of fully vaccinated American travelers to Canada this
month will also help cargo.
"We know that means more airplanes flying into the U.S. and that opens trade
lanes for the globe to feed into and out of the U.S. on our network."
(Reporting By Allison Lampert in Montreal and Sanjana Shivdas in Bengaluru;
Editing by Denny Thomas and Dan Grebler)
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