The Phnom Penh Post

Emirates boosts cargo capacity

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On the freight side of the business, we are not new to the Cambodian market. Historical­ly, we have trucked cargo to gateways such as Bangkok and Ho Chi Minh City. We started building up the Cambodian market as an offline point, but in April 2016 we had our first dedicated cargo flight.

Cambodia is still very much an emerging economy and with a sustained 7 percent annual GDP growth, we calculate that means about 13 percent export growth. So to cater to this type of growth, we decided that an offline solution – trucking cargo to a different gateway – would not be a long-term product suitable for this market.

Our aircrafts can carry 20 tonnes of freight. So with 20 tonnes in the passenger belly, we tend to call our passenger flights ‘freighters in disguise’.

For us it makes a lot of sense to connect two emerging markets. And our cargo operations are just piggy-backing on the commercial flight. So while it is a passenger-orient- ed carrier, roughly 87 percent of our revenue comes from the passenger side and 13 percent from cargo.

Previously this flight connected Yangon with Hanoi, but we are delinking Hanoi by adding a direct flight to Vietnam. We see these new routes as part of our global expansion, because we know the factories of the world are in Asia. Roughly 34 percent of our cargo revenue comes from the Southeast Asia region. So, I think Cambodia fits in very well because it manufactur­es garments that need distributi­on capability and the reach to take goods to customers.

What we tend to do is compartmen­talise the freight giving 10 tonnes to each country. While we believe we could sell more than 10 tonnes daily in the Cambodian market, Yangon has a landing weight restrictio­n. Meanwhile, because Yangon doesn’t have a payload restrictio­n for takeoff, we can fill it up with whatever space is left.

Well, when we get into a new route, we create a business timeline that is based on both the passenger and cargo factor, and track the performanc­e through a very tight management control. If a route is not performing according to plan, we take action. But generally our experience is that 12 months is a long enough amount of a time to judge whether we have reached maturity and profitabil­ity. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

 ?? SRENG MENG SRUN ?? Emirates Vice President of Cargo Commercial for the Far East and Australasi­a Ravishanka­r Mirle photograph­ed yesterday in Phnom Penh.
SRENG MENG SRUN Emirates Vice President of Cargo Commercial for the Far East and Australasi­a Ravishanka­r Mirle photograph­ed yesterday in Phnom Penh.

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