The Standard (St. Catharines)

Air Canada looks to expand its cargo business

Airline is looking for a potential opportunit­y in otherwise bleak year

-

MONTREAL— Air Canada pilots have ratified changes to their contract that will help the carrier grow its cargo business, as airlines scramble to minimize the pandemic’s toll on their bottom lines.

The Montreal-based airline said Friday that it would convert several of its retired Boeing 767 aircraft to carry freight and that it had appointed a new executive, Jason Berry, to oversee its cargo division.

“Air Canada and Air Canada Cargo have pivoted quickly to new and unique commercial opportunit­ies in response to evolving market conditions over the past 11 months,” Lucie Guillemett­e, Air Canada’s chief commercial officer, said in the statement.

The airline has looked to cargo as a potential opportunit­y in an otherwise bleak year.

In May, Air Canada announced it was adding flights to Bogota, Lima, Amsterdam, Dublin and Madrid to its cargo service, which includes up to 100 internatio­nal all-cargo flights per week, according to the airline.

With passenger demand low, other major airlines, like American Airlines and United Airlines, have begun operating cargo-only flights this year, hoping to stem losses.

In the third quarter, United’s cargo revenue jumped nearly 50 per cent compared with the previous year.

The announceme­nt Friday comes as Canadian airlines await a decision from Ottawa on financial support for the industry. The government pledged in September to provide support for hard-hit businesses in the travel and tourism industries, but it has yet to announce a detailed plan.

Air Canada said the pilot contract changes will help it operate more competitiv­ely in the cargo business.

Berry, whose appointmen­t begins Jan. 1, will join Air Canada from Alaska Airlines’ wholly owned subsidiary Mcgee Air Services, where he was president. He led Alaska Airlines’ cargo business from 2012 until June 2019.

 ?? ADRIAN DENNIS AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Air Canada said Friday that it would convert several of its retired Boeing 767 aircraft to carry freight and that it had appointed a new executive, Jason Berry, to oversee its cargo division.
ADRIAN DENNIS AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Air Canada said Friday that it would convert several of its retired Boeing 767 aircraft to carry freight and that it had appointed a new executive, Jason Berry, to oversee its cargo division.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada